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Spheric   Listen
Spheric

adjective
1.
Having the shape of a sphere or ball.  Synonyms: ball-shaped, global, globose, globular, orbicular, spherical.  "Nearly orbicular in shape" , "Little globular houses like mud-wasp nests"



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"Spheric" Quotes from Famous Books



... to that music, slowly, grandly waking, Till, bathed in beauty, it became a world; Led by his voice, its spheric pathway taking, While glorious clouds their wings around ...
— Music and Some Highly Musical People • James M. Trotter

... therefore fate, the strong. Would that my will did sweep full swing with thine! Then harmony with every spheric song, And conscious power, would give sureness divine. Who thinks to thread thy great laws' onward throng, Is as a fly that creeps his foolish way Athwart an engine's wheels in ...
— A Book of Strife in the Form of The Diary of an Old Soul • George MacDonald

... recommendation of his scientific friends, he was appointed Nautical Examiner at the Trinity House; of a ploughman in Lincolnshire, who, without aid of men or books, discovered the rotation of the earth, the principles of spherical astronomy, and invented a planetary system akin to the Tychonic; of a country Shoemaker, who became distinguished as one of the ablest metaphysical writers in Britain, and who, at more than fifty years of ...
— Thrift • Samuel Smiles

... military airship in England was built, which bore the grandiloquent title of Nulli Secundus. One of the envelopes constructed by Colonel Templer was used: it was cylindrical in shape with spherical ends. Suspended beneath the envelope by means of a net and four broad silk bands was a triangular steel framework or keel from which was slung a small car. A 50 horsepower Antoinette engine was situated in the forward part of the car which drove two metal-bladed propellers by belts. ...
— British Airships, Past, Present, and Future • George Whale

... gig, now so generally in use, had not as yet been brought to that state of perfection that has made its use in these modern times a matter of ease and comfort. We had wheels, to be sure, but they were not spherical as they have since become, and were made out of stone blocks weighing ten or fifteen tons apiece, and hewn octagonally, so that a ride over the country roads in a vehicle of that period not only involved the services ...
— The Autobiography of Methuselah • John Kendrick Bangs


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