She accompliſhed in 1706 a union of England and Scotland into one kingdom, ſtyled, cognominally with the the^([sic]) iland of which they are parts, the kingdom of Great-Britain;
Source: wiktionary
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She accompliſhed in 1706 a union of England and Scotland into one kingdom, ſtyled, cognominally with the the^([sic]) iland of which they are parts, the kingdom of Great-Britain;
Source: wiktionary
“Rich in worldly things,” I resumed, with a sigh, “but cognominally I am impoverished, degraded, sunk deeper than plummet ever sounded. Were it a fair name, I could submit; but this is a nickname, a byword, a reproach.[…]”
Source: wiktionary
Oh, Wilhelmina—Wilhelmina— / Sweet swearer “by the living jingo!”— / Thy Goldsmith ne’er had soiled so fine a / Mouth as thine own with vulgar lingo, / But for thine other name;—he knew / That “gods” must knuckle down to “fegs,” / When oaths out-flew from maids like you, / Cognominally known as—Skeggs.
Source: wiktionary
The double ovals appear in other monuments, and thus cognominally identify the kings.
Source: wiktionary
Showing 4 of 10 available sentences.
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.