Citations:runcible


 * 1) * 1877, Edward Lear, “The Pobble Who Has no Toes” in Laughable Lyrics: A Fourth Book of Nonsense Poems, Songs, Botany, Music, etc., p 24:
 * “He has gone to fish, for his Aunt Jobiska's Runcible Cat with crimson whiskers!”
 * 1) * 1888, Edward Lear, Nonsense Songs & Stories, 6th ed, p 8:
 * His body is perfectly spherical, He weareth a runcible hat.
 * 1) * 1895, Edward Lear, Nonsense Songs & Stories, new ed:
 * 76: What a runcible goose you are!
 * 77: We shall presently all be dead, On this ancient runcible wall.
 * 1) * 1985, Richard William Johnson, The Politics of Recession, Macmillan, p 184:
 * [chapter title] Ireland and the Runcible Men
 * 1) * 1994, Marnie Parsons, in Touch Monkeys: Nonsense Strategies for Reading Twentieth-Century Poetry, University of Toronto Press:
 * 10: [chapter title] Runcible Relations: A Taxonomy of Nonsense Criticism and Theory
 * 16: Framing this discussion of runcible relations with madness and linguistic operations has a certain propriety, for much of the language theory employed in the later parts of this study uses madness as a means of explicating some of the ways language functions.
 * 1) * 1985, Richard William Johnson, The Politics of Recession, Macmillan, p 184:
 * [chapter title] Ireland and the Runcible Men
 * 1) * 1994, Marnie Parsons, in Touch Monkeys: Nonsense Strategies for Reading Twentieth-Century Poetry, University of Toronto Press:
 * 10: [chapter title] Runcible Relations: A Taxonomy of Nonsense Criticism and Theory
 * 16: Framing this discussion of runcible relations with madness and linguistic operations has a certain propriety, for much of the language theory employed in the later parts of this study uses madness as a means of explicating some of the ways language functions.