The human race is gregarious and sequacious, rather than individual and adventurous. From Wordnik.com. [Horace and His Influence] Reference
It seemed odd that after so long it would continue to be sequacious to trust what was experienced in either of the chemically induced realms but then, he asked himself, what choice did it have?. From Wordnik.com. [An Apostate: Nawin of Thais] Reference
Closer to the market there were numerous people in a row like sequacious ants, all seeking bits of a distant morsel, but unlike ants these people sought for themselves and, even here, with their wallets as feelers. From Wordnik.com. [An Apostate: Nawin of Thais] Reference
Societies were founded, cities built, and countries cultivated by Orpheus and Amphion, and men of analogous fame, who wielded at will this mythic power, and made all the susceptibilities of nature "sequacious of the lyre.". From Wordnik.com. [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 62, Number 361, November, 1845.] Reference
But this merely sequacious thought was promptly routed. From Wordnik.com. [The Avalanche] Reference
Emerson's meaning, owing to his non-sequacious style, is often very difficult to apprehend. From Wordnik.com. [Obiter Dicta Second Series] Reference
If one were required to name the most non-sequacious author one had ever read, I do not see how one could help nominating. From Wordnik.com. [Obiter Dicta Second Series] Reference
While the tranquil Sabine Farm is his delight, well he knows that on the dark trail ahead of him, even Sabine Farms are not sequacious. From Wordnik.com. [The Precept of Peace] Reference
The essence of all their plans is to consolidate in the executive all the powers of the government, by reducing the popular branches to such sequacious docility, that, like the States General under tiie Mon - archy, they may be convened and dismissed at the beck of an arbitrary master. From Wordnik.com. [The works, in verse and prose, of the late Robert Treat Paine, jun., esq. [microform] : with notes, to which are prefixed sketches of his life, character and writings] Reference
Milton was not an extensive or discursive thinker, as Shakspeare was; for the motions of his mind were slow, solemn, sequacious, like those of the planets; not agile and assimilative; not attracting all things within its own sphere; not multiform: repulsion was the law of his intellect -- he moved in solitary grandeur. From Wordnik.com. [Memorials and Other Papers — Complete] Reference
Boldlier swept, the long sequacious notes. From Wordnik.com. [Poems of Coleridge] Reference
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