Definition of "anothers"
anothers
pronoun
Quotations
Thẽ ſhalt thow perceave what it meaneth that the power of this wretched monſtre / muſt be ſtrengthed / by anothers power and not by his awne.
1529, John Frith, transl., A pistle to the Christen reader / The Revelation of Antichrist. Antithesis / wherin are compared to geder Christes actes and oure holye father the Popes., folio lij, recto
[…] and so they aver to be drunk, or accessory to anothers Distemper (especially supposing the Distemper under command from breaking out into any other sins besides its own dementation, or stupidity) to be a lesse sin, than to call one Drunkard, on the bare sight of him in a Distemper, or but one slender Information.
1654, Richard Whitlock, “Scylla and Charybdis, Or, False Reformations Shipwrack”, in Ζωοτομία, or, Observations on the Present Manners of the English: Briefly Anatomizing the Living by the Dead. With an Usefull Detection of the Mounte Banks of Both Sexes., London: […] Tho[mas] Roycroft, […], pages 511–512
Theſe ſo great Slaughters, Nations mighty dread, / Like Whirlwinds through ſo many Cities ſpread, / Which might have been anothers cloſing Fame, / Were but his Marches Actions; thus he came: / And in ſo many glorious Conqueſts ſhar’d / The Spoils of War, while he for War prepar’d.
1701, Lucius Annaeus Seneca, “Troades; or The Royal Captives. A Tragedy, […]”, in Edward Sherburne, transl., The Tragedies of L. Annæus Seneca the Philosopher; viz. Medea, Phædra and Hippolytus, Troades, or the Royal Captives, and The Rape of Helen, out of the Greek of Coluthus; […], London: […] S. Smith and B. Walford, […], published 1702, act II, scene ii, pages 241–242, lines 33–38