Citations:piecemeal
English citations of piecemeal
Adverb: piece by piece edit
1726 | 1816 1819 1847 | 1909 1914 | 2019 | ||||
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- 1726 - Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's Travels, book II, part 3
- Some of them seized my cake, and carried it piecemeal away; others flew about my head and face, confounding me with the noise, and putting me in the utmost terror of their stings.
- 1816 - George Gordon, Lord Byron, Darkness
- Ships sailorless lay rotting on the sea,
And their masts fell down piecemeal
- Ships sailorless lay rotting on the sea,
- 1819 - Washington Irving, The Sketchbook of Geoffrey Crayon, Preface
- The following papers, with two exceptions, were written in England, and formed but part of an intended series for which I had made notes and memorandums. Before I could mature a plan, however, circumstances compelled me to send them piecemeal to the United States, where they were published from time to time in portions or numbers.
- 1847 - Herman Melville, Omoo, chapter LXII
- Before we left the shed, the old fellow toppled the whole concern over, and dragged it away piecemeal.
- 1909 - Bram Stoker, The Lady of the Shroud, book IX
- ...when Greece was almost a byword, and when Albania as a nation--though still nominally subject--was of such unimpaired virility that there were great possibilities of her future, it was imperative that something must happen if the Balkan race was not to be devoured piecemeal by her northern neighbours.
- 1914 - Saki, The Forbidden Buzzards
- It's as bad as selling a man a horse with half a dozen latent vices and watching him discover them piecemeal in the course of the hunting season.
- 2019 February 27, Drachinifel, 32:16 from the start, in The Battle of Samar - Odds? What are those?[1], archived from the original on 3 November 2022:
- Meanwhile, various aircraft from Taffy 3, launched piecemeal, along with the arrival of a concentrated strike formation from Taffies 1 and 2 further south, begin to make runs at various Japanese capital ships, with many aircraft machine-gunning their targets once the more-conventional antishipping weapons are expended. This assault considerably disrupts the Japanese formation.
Adverb: into pieces or parts edit
1849 1888 | |||||||
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- 1849 - The Mabinogion, The Dream of Rhonabwy, translated by Lady Charlotte Guest from the anonymous medieval manuscript
- And when they had played awhile, they heard a mighty tumult, and a wailing of men, and a croaking of Ravens, as they carried the men in their strength into the air, and, tearing them betwixt them, let them fall piecemeal to the earth.
- 1888 - The Whitehall Murder, Daily Telegraph (London), October 03
- A few years ago also there was the case of Kate Webster, who at Richmond murdered her mistress, and, fiend-like, cut the body up piecemeal, and tried to dispose of it in various ways by small portions.
Adjective: made or done in pieces edit
1821 | 1947 1965 | ||||||
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- 1821 - John Taylor of Caroline, Tyranny Unmasked, section III
- We may obtain a correct idea of the piecemeal mode of destroying theoretical liberty, by supposing that the first Congress under the present constitution, had published a declaration in the following words.
- 1947 - George Marshall, The Marshall Plan Speech
- Such assistance, I am convinced, must not be on a piecemeal basis, as various crises develop.
- 1965 - Hugh M. Cole, The Ardennes: Battle of the Bulge, chapter XX
- Patton replied that he could start a piecemeal attack in three days, a co-ordinated attack in six.