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A reference work (often in several volumes) containing articles on various topics (often arranged in alphabetical order) dealing with the entire range of human knowledge or with some particular specialty.
An astonishing woman that; a cyclopaedia of the day's small talk.
2
Practically, none of the cyclopaedia previously accessible in our language has now much value.
3
He had read vastly; his memory was a literary cyclopaedia.
4
Next to this very convenient subdivision of topics, the most striking merit of the new cyclopaedia is, perhaps, comprehensiveness.
5
The sharp Bohemian, by playing at all trades, brushing against gentry of all sorts and scouring all neighborhoods, becomes at length a living cyclopaedia.
6
Or he would become a successful politician, which was easier than all, for nothing was needed in this career but strong lungs and a cyclopaedia.
7
So that man of learning, that marvellous prodigy, that walking cyclopaedia, Lord St. Eval, has absolutely deserted us, to bury himself in Italy or Switzerland.
8
From a cyclopædia read the history of Australia as a convict colony.
9
Hoyt, J. K. Cyclopædia of practical quotations, English, Latin, and modern foreign.
10
Oddly, it has invented the Cyclopaedia for knowledge, the sausage for nutrition!
11
Written for the Penny Cyclopaedia, and published previously as a book in 1834.
12
Consult an English history or a cyclopædia and learn about the opium war.
13
Cyclopædia of political science, political economy, and political history of the United States.
14
From a cyclopædia read the following topics: The opium war, Commodore Perry's expedition.
15
Champlin, J. D. jr. Young folks' cyclopædia of persons and places.
16
Excerpts from the Cyclopaedia illustrative of the lives of businessmen of that era.