| 1. | I am not an earth nor an adjunct of an earth. - from Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman |
| 2. | To keep an adjunct to remember the. - from The Complete Works of William Shakespeare by William Shakespeare |
| 3. | Learning is but an adjunct to ourself. - from The Complete Works of William Shakespeare by William Shakespeare |
| 4. | And every humour hath his adjunct pleasure. - from The Complete Works of William Shakespeare by William Shakespeare |
| 5. | Though that my death were adjunct to my act. - from The Complete Works of William Shakespeare by William Shakespeare |
| 6. | While I was much interested in Dejah Thoris' explanation of this wonderful adjunct to Martian warfare, I was more concerned by the immediate problem of their treatment of her. - from A Princess of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs |
| 7. | Vagrancy, that Gallic picareria, accepted the sewer as the adjunct of the Cour des Miracles, and at evening, it returned thither, fierce and sly, through the Maubuee outlet, as into a bed-chamber. - from Les Miserables by Victor Hugo |
| 8. | The earth good and the stars good, and their adjuncts all good. - from Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman |
| 9. | One of those indispensable adjuncts without which no home is complete.. - from My Man Jeeves by P. G. Wodehouse |
| 10. | I rang for the tea, and the waiter, reappearing with his magic clew, brought in by degrees some fifty adjuncts to that refreshment, but of tea not a glimpse. - from Great Expectations by Charles Dickens |