1630, John Taylor, “Taylors Pastorall, being Both Historicall and Satyricall.[…]”, in All the Workes of Iohn Taylor the Water-poet.[…], London:[…] Iames Boler; […], →OCLC, page 52; republished in The Works of John Taylor the Water Poet[…] (Publications of the Spenser Society;no. 2), [Manchester]:[…] Spenser Society, 1868, →OCLC, page 536, column 2:
The Dromedarie, Camell, Horſe, and Aſſe, / For loade and carriage doth a Sheepe ſurpaſſe:[...]
1650, Edward Leigh, “Δρόμος[Drómos]”, in Critica Sacra in Two Parts: The First Containing Observations on All the Radices, or Primitive Hebrevv Words of the Old Testament, in Order Alphabetical. […] The Second Philologicall and Theologicall Observations upon All the Greek Words of the New Testament, in Order Alphabetical.[…], 3rd edition, London:[…] Thomas Underhill[…], →OCLC, page 74, column 2:
[T]he Dromedarie[...] who is marvellous ſwift, and will run an hundred miles in a day; but the Germanes call a dull and ſlow man a Dromedary, [...]
Oh, thou Dromedary, thou Founder'd Mule, without a Pack-ſaddle; or what other foul Beaſt ſhall I call thee, for Man thou art not, nor haſt not been to me, Heaven knows the time when? Art not thou aſham'd to ſee me, thou Nincompoop?
1765, [Simon Berington], The Adventures of Sig. Gaudentio di Lucca.[…], Glasgow:[…] James Knox,[…], →OCLC, page 66:
Here we alighted, drank ourſelves, and gave our dromedaries to drink as much as they would; then we filled all our veſſels, made on purpoſe for carriage, and took in a much greater proportion of water than we had done proviſions.
1791, Oliver Goldsmith, “The Camel, and the Dromedary”, in An History of the Earth, and Animated Nature.[…], new edition, volume IV, London:[…] F[rancis] Wingrave, successor to Mr. [John] Nourse,[…], →OCLC, page 280:
[T]he camel has two bunches upon his back, whereas the dromedary has but one; the latter alſo, is neither ſo large, nor ſo ſtrong, as the camel. Theſe two races, however, produce with each other, and the mixed breed formed between them is conſidered the beſt, the moſt patient, and the moſt indefatigable of all the kind.
The untreated cases have been arranged in three groups according to the clinical course. The first group, called the dromedary group, shows the curious phenomenon of two different periods of illness with an interval of well-being. […] Because of the two distinct groups or humps of symptoms, the analogy to the arrangement of the dromedary’s back was taken to express the type figuratively.
Usage notes
The dromedary was formerly known by a number of different binomial names:
Camelus aegyptiacus Friedrich August Rudolph Kolenati, 1847
Camelus africanus Gloger, 1841
Camelus arabicus Charles Desmoulins, 1823
Camelus dromas Peter Simon Pallas, 1811
Camelus dromos Kerr, 1792
Camelus ferus Falk,1786
Camelus lukius Kolenati, 1847
Camelus polytrichus Kolenati, 1847
Camelus turcomanichus Johann Fischer von Waldheim, 1829