nationhood in English

noun

['na·tion·hood || 'næʃnhʊd]

state of being a separate unified natio

Use "nationhood" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "nationhood" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "nationhood", or refer to the context using the word "nationhood" in the English Dictionary.

1. 18 Citizenship is about the sense of nationhood.

2. A sense of Indonesian nationhood exists alongside strong regional identities.

3. The Burgundian period is when the road to nationhood began.

4. Assurgency offers a land-based lens for contextualizing resistance & resurgence as normative, assurgent practices of Indigenous nationhood

5. The Canadian Forces and civilian participation in the First World War helped to foster a sense of British-Canadian nationhood.

6. Many Germans in the late 19th century viewed colonial acquisitions as a true indication of having achieved nationhood.

7. So he made one of the main tasks of his life the welding of ' Muslim Nationalism ' and ' Hindu Nationalism ' into the common Indian nationhood .

8. Bulls, Bullfighting, and Spanish Identities is an intriguing study of symbolism used to examine the broader anthropological issues of identity and nationhood

9. Kashmir remained Aloof of the British Raj, and was established as an independent state, under Hindu minority rule, a century prior to India's independence and nationhood

10. In fact, Americanization is crucial for American nationhood. It's how we survived the earlier waves of immigration - and went on to become a stronger nation with the help of those immigrants

11. Thus, the social and economic transformation in India has taken place within the framework of our abiding commitment to these core values, which has enabled us to weather some of the most serious difficulties, political and economic, that have periodically challenged our national fibre and even tested our nationhood.

12. Here of our own accord and not at their Biddance, and were deter mined to be free as long as we should exist."9 Jefferson's conception of Virginian and American nationhood assumed a fundamental relationship between a particular people and its territorial domain

13. These Conjunctures have meaning as well, because of “the contradictory ground on which new interrelationships and interdependencies are being created across the boundaries of nationhood and region, with all the forms of trans-national globalization that have come to dominate the contemporary world” (Stuart Hall, Caribbean Reasonings, 284).