XVIIIth
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From XVIII (Roman numeral representing eighteen) + -th.
Pronunciation
[edit]- Hyphenation: XVIIIth
Adjective
[edit]XVIIIth (not comparable)
- 18th; Abbreviation of eighteenth.
- 1863, Georgiana Malcolm, transl., Pictures of German Life In the XVIIIth and XIXth Centuries, volume II, London: Chapman and Hall, translation of original by Freytag, Gustav:
- PICTURES / of / GERMAN LIFE / In the XVIIIth and XIXth Centuries.
- 1895, Egyptian Tales: XVIIIth to XIXth Dynasty, page 29:
- The prince goes to the chief of Naharaina, a land probably unknown to the Egyptians until the Asiatic conquests of the XVIIIth Dynasty had led them to the upper waters of the Euphrates.
- 1900, French Architects and Sculptors of the XVIIIth Century, London: George Bell and Sons, page XIII:
- French Architects of the XVIIIth Century.
- 1940, Printed Books of the XVth to the XVIIIth Century, Many Illustrated with Woodcuts Or Engravings, page 12:
- Nordenskiold: Periplus, reproduces the Chart of the Arctic Ocean (No. II. of our Atlas) on p. 97, and notes (p. 98) that this is a very early map of the North Coast of Asia based on the Great Northern Expedition (1734–42); no official and complete atlas faithfully rendering the observations of this Expedition was published during the XVIIIth cent.
- 1992, Józef Jagielski, Mirosław Górnicki, editors, Electrocardiology '91: Proceedings of the XVIIIth International Congress on Electrocardiology: Warsaw, Poland, 24 – 26 August 1991, World Scientific, →ISBN, page IV:
- XVIIIth INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS ON ELECTROCARDIOLOGY, 1991
- 2001, Angel Miguel Navarro, Flemish and Dutch Masters (from the XVIth to the XVIIIth Century) at the National Museum of Fine Arts, →ISBN, page 46:
- We believe that this work was produced in Flanders in the XVIIIth century imitating the style that prevailed there during the first quarter of the previous century.
- 2006, Imagining Europe in the XVIIIth century: the case of Herder:
- Imagining Europe in the XVIIIth century: the case of Herder
Usage notes
[edit]Used in the titles of conferences.