A heavy morocco often used in bookbinding.
1You straightway levant with some old shaveling: so you see not my purgatory.
2He will, believe me, be our destroyer unless we levant.
3He was so stupefied that, on recovery, he hurried upstairs and got Hammond to levant with him.
4I will take for my subject a rare old book that is to be rebound in a half-levant morocco binding.
5We shall levant together.
6Now who but France would bind her municipal documents in heavily tooled, full levant morocco, with grained silk inside covers?
7Cloth, extra, gilt edges, $5.00; morocco, antique, $10.00; crushed levant, $15.00.
8As yet all except a small part are merely arranged in chronological order, but soon it is to be sumptuously bound in royal purple levant.
9Commencement edition, crushed levant, price $6.00.
10New, complete edition, 8vo, extra cloth, gilt edges, $4.00; imitation crushed levant, gilt edges, $5.00; full Turkey morocco, $8.00.
11Adalia played a considerable part in the medieval history of the Levant.
12The vampires and pest-hags of the Levant are their successors in malignity.
13Turlington has not always been in the Levant trade- Iknowthat already.
14With Malta and Corfu she has a like advantage over the Levant.
15The most significant theatre may well turn out to be the Levant.
16It came from the Levant, and its members spoke Greek among themselves.