We have no meanings for "veracious history" in our records yet.
1 They never did find out, and never will, unless they read this veracious history .
2 Doubtless the portraits are a trifle rose-colored, but they accord, in the main, with more veracious history .
3 Another blank succeeds in this veracious history .
4 He had not read much, but he had read Robinson Crusoe, and believed in it as a veracious history .
5 It is to be observed, that on coming to this passage, the author of this veracious history breaks out into exclamations.
6 Thus ends the romantic story told us by the chronicler Frédégaire, somewhat too romantic to be accepted for veracious history , we fear.
7 For he had come, all unwitting, to a turning of the ways, and his choice is the cause of this veracious history .
8 On the evening of which I was speaking in my last chapter, Mr Johnson was evidently in the vein for narrating his veracious history .
9 These are the only scraps of veracious history that come down to us; the other choice bits I take to be exercises in prosaic romance.
10 If this were not a veracious history , don't you see that it would have been easy to send our Virginian on a more glorious campaign?
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: