old south in English

noun
1
the southern states of the US before the Civil War (1861–65).
The rites and customs of the Old South no longer work.

Use "old south" in a sentence

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

1. Old South Chandlery Photography sprayed into the Grain of Solid Pine

2. The original title: Manuscript of the Old South. Scarlett's original name: Pansy.

3. This is the Old South that featured everyone's favorite character, the fugitive from a chain gang.

4. Capital Crestings continues to offer 23 designs with English medieval, Spanish, French, Old South, and even Art Deco antecedents

5. Anaximander, Unruly Women: The Politics of Social and Sexual Control in the Old South (Gender and American Culture)Victoria E

6. Give in to the genteel feel of the old South on Carnival cruises from the beautiful port of Charleston, South Carolina

7. Arcadia sits in the middle of Florida cowboy country and it is a place where the Old West meets the Old South

8. For those not in the know, the word “Antebellum” is typically used to refer to the pre-Civil War Old South, when slavery was still legal and plantations were commonplace

9. The Bear Hunter: The Life and Times of Robert Eager Bobo in the Canebrakes of the Old South - Kindle edition by McCafferty, James T, McCafferty, JIm, Bobo, Mary Brock, Haas, Jay

10. His Secret Cities of Old South America was described by The Explorers Club in a review as a "crank book, basing most of its fantastic conclusions on the assumption that Atlantis and Mu did exist...

11. Jim McCafferty is the author of The Bear Hunter: The Life and Times of Robert Eager Bobo in the Canebrakes of the Old South and two children's book, Holt and the Teddy Bear and Holt and the Cowboys

12. B ("In current literary history and criticism, however, [the term Agrarians] is usually applied to a group of Southern American writers who published in Nashville, Tennessee, between 1922 and 1925, The Fugitive, a little magazine of poetry and some criticism championing agrarian regionalism but attacking "the old high-caste Brahmins of the Old South."