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6 Sentences With "justling"

How to use justling in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "justling" and check conjugation/comparative form for "justling". Mastering all the usages of "justling" from sentence examples published by news publications.

It is more than this, the whole world's map, which you may here discerne in it's perfect'st motion, justling and turning.
It is more than this, the whole woorlde's map, which you may here discerne in its perfect motion, justling and turning.
It is more than this, the whole world's map, which you may here discern in its perfectest motion, justling and turning.
It is more than this, the whole world's map, which you may here discern in its perfectest motion, justling and turning.
Lord Byron refers to the Symplegades in the concluding stanzas of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage: The New Critic I. A. Richards refers to 'Symplegades' in his work Practical Criticism. In Chapter 2, 'Figurative Language', he refers to dangers of misinterpretation in reading poems: "These twin dangers - careless, 'intuitive' reading and prosaic, 'over-literal' reading - are the Symplegades, the 'justling rocks', between which too many ventures into poetry are wrecked." In his 1961 novel Jason, Henry Treece depicts the Symplegades as icebergs that drifted downriver into the Black Sea.
In his Microcosmographie (1628), a series of satirical portraits of contemporary England, John Earle (1601–1665), described it thus: > [Paul's walk] is the land's epitome, or you may call it the lesser isle of > Great Britain. It is more than this, the whole world's map, which you may > here discern in its perfectest motion, justling and turning. It is a heap of > stones and men, with a vast confusion of languages; and were the steeple not > sanctified, nothing liker Babel. The noise in it is like that of bees, a > strange humming or buzz mixed of walking tongues and feet: it is a kind of > still roar or loud whisper ... It is the great exchange of all discourse, > and no business whatsoever but is here stirring and a-foot ... It is the > general mint of all famous lies, which are here like the legends of popery, > first coined and stamped in the church.

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