liberal|liberals in English
noun
[lib·er·al || 'lɪbərəl]
one favors political and social reform, one who supports a progressive political philosophy; member of a liberal political party
Use "liberal|liberals" in a sentence
1. He joined the Liberal Party in 1968 and served on the Young Liberals' executive committee.
2. Although Kinsley conceded that big Babyism had been enabled by both conservative and liberal politics, he wrote: “It is conservatives, more than liberals, who stoke the fires of resentment and
3. Because liberals reject three of these foundations.
4. 7 He aligned himself withthe liberals.
5. Deliberative Democracy and Beyond: Liberals, Critics, Contestations
6. In 1900–1920, liberals called themselves "progressives".
7. Because the liberals think you're a bitch.
8. Then, Atwin crossed the floor, giving the Liberals back …
9. The Liberals are Abjectly afraid of the universities
10. The liberals band together against the new legislation.
11. The majority of the Coexist followers are secular liberals.
12. At the moment, the liberals are losing ground.
13. Public policy on the family presents liberals with a dilemma.
14. The Liberals also split on regional lines in 1992.
15. 12 Such pragmatism has not come easy to liberals.
16. 14 She defected from the Liberals and joined the Socialists.
17. The Liberals initially acknowledged the problem a little bit
18. We were unfortunate to lose a group of Liberals .
19. Again, the Liberals' wealth redistribution record has been absolutely dismal
20. The political pendulum has swung in favour of the liberals.
21. The Roots of Liberal Condescension Snobbery is the last refuge of the liberal-arts major
22. All that liberals can not tolerate is pretension to infallibility.
23. "National Liberal Arts College Rankings".
24. Just as they had earlier written off Bismarck as an Archconservative, liberals
25. The liberals regarded sending telegrams of condolence as a polite gesture.