Citations:appilation


 * 16th–17th CC.?,  XCV (1900), page 364:
 * After the Chancellor’s return from the conference at Calais, he fell into such a state of appilation that, besides having become (as the physicians say) jaundiced, he by degrees got confirmed dropsy, and had it not been for his robust constitution, a variety of remedies prescribed for him by the English physicians having been of no use, he would by this time be in a bad way, his physiognomy being so changed as to astound all who see him.
 * , Collected Plays III, page 8:
 * Broomy. And the miasma of its effluvias — and the unfathomable appilation of its pugnacities pronounce it a phenomena in the universality of its amalgamating propensities!