Even now there were days when fanciedresemblances seem to people the crowds.
2
Gladly would I be convinced that I am misled by some fanciedresemblance.
3
It was but a delusion, a fanciedresemblance, or a trick of the imagination.
4
It was named from a fanciedresemblance of its quill plectra to spines or thorns.]
5
You were deceived by a fanciedresemblance.
6
Zurich need not rely upon any fanciedresemblance of this sort for a distinct charm of its own.
7
Was it only a delusion, as so many other fanciedresemblances had been, or was it after all-afterall-
8
More than once I had puzzled myself over a fanciedresemblance of Mr. Hamilton to some picture I had seen.
9
Perhaps a fanciedresemblance of the two men in the popular mind had something to do with this transfer of name.
10
He has made the most of a fanciedresemblance to me, and in many delightful ways has indulged in pleasantries based on it.
11
We have placed these names together, not on account of any fanciedresemblance between the two poets, but for the very opposite reason.
12
I could almost have believed that it was an illusion and fanciedresemblance, only I had never seen a face like Mr. Hamilton's.
13
He mounted the Alps, and named one of the highest peaks Kosciusko, from the fanciedresemblance of its outline to the patriot's tomb at Cracow.
14
The once uncanny, misprized, even accursed city, since surnamed Montpellier-le-Vieux, from a fanciedresemblance to Montpellier, is now very differently regarded by its humble owners.
15
Supposing he found that he did not love me after all, that he had been misled by a fanciedresemblance in me to the miniature!
16
"To please you in a whim, Major Strickland, which I cannot characterise as anything but ridiculous, I will try to discover this fanciedresemblance."