I too must make divers pilgrimages, for all about the city, beyond the waters or beyond the hills, lie holy places immemorially old.
On the other hand stretched less formal woods, with fields for such polite athletics as tennis, which the example of the beloved young English Queen of Spain is bringing into reluctant favor with women immemorially accustomed to immobility.
They seem to have been immemorially handed down to him, from ancestors emulating the urbanity of Caesar, and refined by the grace of Horace.
Together they went to the gate over on the side opposite the Hill of Evil Counsel, immemorially the lepers' begging-ground.
This tithe question had been immemorially a troublesome one, ever since a tincture of Christianity had overspread those regions.
Also, a synonym of scot, a reckoning at an inn, and has immemorially been thus understood.
The lord or abbot of misrule on shore has immemorially been a person selected to superintend the diversions of Christmas.
This trade has immemorially been an excellent nursery for seamen.
The men sent on board ship from prisons; but the term has also been immemorially used, as applied to some of the Dragon's men in the voyage of Sir Thomas Roe to Surat, 1615.
Metempsychosis has been immemorially believed in Japan, where the people, even in our days, according to Koempsfer, abstain from meat, and live exclusively upon fruits and vegetables.
That the common fields within the township of Hitchin have immemorially been and ought to be kept and cultivated in three successive seasons of tilthgrain, etchgrain, and fallow.
This has been immemorially the reliable point in performances of the kind he was giving, but he introduced it in a manner of his own.
But the funeral rite which I saw and took part in, on the anniversary of the death of Prince Sanj[=o], struck me asimmemorially primitive.
And in a mountain village I saw a dance unlike anything I ever saw before--some dance immemorially old, and full of weird grace.
No relation is discoverable between the urban settlements thus gradually formed and the three communities into which from an immemorially early period the Roman commonwealth was in political law divided.
Other examples of it are met with in the Babylonian contracts, and prove how immemorially old it is.
This transition of certain spirits into gods seems to have been aided by that study of the heavens and of the heavenly bodies for which the Babylonians were immemorially famous.
They seem to have been immemorially handed down to him from ancestors emulating the urbanity of Caesar, and refined by the grace of Horace.
It was like the immemorially old and ever new mystery of conception.
And was not woman immemorially older than man--the first created, but not the first conceived?
The orthodox had immemorially asserted that revelation imparted information not otherwise attainable, or not then attainable.
The left road leads to Dorchester, the right one to Wareham, and the centre one across the immemorially ancient and changeless "Egdon Heath.
The old Abbey wood is full of shadows and is the kind of place that one would write down as immemorially old, barren and sinister.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "immemorially" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.