All 13 Uses
specimen
in
The Portrait of a Lady - Volume 1
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- Mrs. Touchett was certainly a person of many oddities, of which her behaviour on returning to her husband's house after many months was a noticeable specimen.†
Chpt 3specimen = an example regarded as typical of its class
- Isabel had spoken to him very often about "specimens;" it was a word that played a considerable part in her vocabulary; she had given him to understand that she wished to see English society illustrated by eminent cases.†
Chpt 7specimens = examples regarded as typical of their class
- "Well now, there's a specimen," he said to her as they walked up from the riverside and he recognised Lord Warburton.†
Chpt 7 *specimen = an example regarded as typical of its class
- "A specimen of what?" asked the girl.†
Chpt 7
- A specimen of an English gentleman.†
Chpt 7
- "He's a favourable specimen then," said Isabel; "because I'm sure he's nice."†
Chpt 7
- "I like your specimen English gentleman very much," Isabel said to Ralph after Lord Warburton had gone.†
Chpt 8
- There's a great demand just now for the alienated American, and your cousin's a beautiful specimen.†
Chpt 10
- It was moreover a seat of ease, indeed of luxury, telling of arrangements subtly studied and refinements frankly proclaimed, and containing a variety of those faded hangings of damask and tapestry, those chests and cabinets of carved and time-polished oak, those angular specimens of pictorial art in frames as pedantically primitive, those perverse-looking relics of medieval brass and pottery, of which Italy has long been the not quite exhausted storehouse.†
Chpt 22specimens = examples regarded as typical of their class
- You should have brought me a specimen of your powers.†
Chpt 22specimen = an example regarded as typical of its class
- He resembled no one she had ever seen; most of the people she knew might be divided into groups of half a dozen specimens.†
Chpt 24specimens = examples regarded as typical of their class
- Her mind contained no class offering a natural place to Mr. Osmond—he was a specimen apart.†
Chpt 24specimen = an example regarded as typical of its class
- This fine specimen of that great class seated himself near our young lady, and in the course of five minutes he had asked her several questions, taken rather at random and to which, as he put some of them twice over, he apparently somewhat missed catching the answer; had given her too some information about himself which was not wasted upon her calmer feminine sense.†
Chpt 27
Definitions:
-
(1)
(specimen) an example thought to represent its type; or a bit of tissue, blood, or urine that is taken for diagnostic purposes
- (2) (meaning too rare to warrant focus)