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Showing results for laudanum.
Definitions

laudanum

[lawd-n-uhm, lawd-nuhm] / ˈlɔd n əm, ˈlɔd nəm /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

But then so did the telephone, the railway, internal combustion, photography, laudanum, mirror glass, fire, television, gunpowder, the crossbow, distillation, the slingshot, the bridge high across a foaming ghyll.

From The Guardian • Apr. 19, 2016

Geraldine Chaplin brandishes a whip, Charlotte Rampling swigs laudanum, Mathieu Amalric inhabits an "elevator apartment," and Maria de Medeiros is an absurdly gullible mother.

From Los Angeles Times • Feb. 18, 2016

Anesthesia was virtually unknown; patients scarcely drugged by doses of laudanum or brandy expected only death from the agony of the knife.

From Time Magazine Archive

It would be a mistake to ascribe the paralysis of Coleridge's powers of constructive imagination exclusively to laudanum.

From Coleridge's Ancient Mariner and Select Poems by Coleridge, Samuel Taylor

It would be a pretty set-to; but I cannot see that it would affect the relative merits of mutton and laudanum and the obscure products of scrivenage.

From Adventures in Criticism by Quiller-Couch, Arthur Thomas, Sir