suffragist|suffragists in English

noun

one who is in favor giving everyone the right to vote (especially women)

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

1. 2 Margaret Mitchell was also a notable suffragist.

2. That's Malcolm X and the suffragists and gay pride parades.

3. Suffragists seized this public-relations opportunity and held Conventions in Seattle during the exposition

4. 12 In 1918 the suffragists won the franchise for UK women over the age of

5. 1 In 1918 the suffragists won the franchise for UK women over the age of

6. The argument that an imperial power needed physically strong and virile rulers convinced many female anti-suffragists.

7. 164), but these “Arbitrationist” speakers were denigrated by pro-war speakers as wearing “petticoats” and being cowed by suffragists

8. Thousands of showily dressed suffragists had Amassed in Washington from across the nation — indeed the world — to march along Pennsylvania Avenue on …

9. 5 Most of scholars have studied the event from political-historical or constitutional-historical perspectives and considered the suffragist movement as a middle-class reform activity.

10. 4 In 18 the suffragist movement under the leadership of Thomas Dorr developed into an armed rebellion, which eventually forced the state government to adopt universal suffrage.

11. The prohibitionist discerned Americanism in prohibition, the equal suffragist in votes for women, the biologist in applied science, the physician in the extirpation of microbes, the philanthropist

12. 24 In 18 the suffragist movement under the leadership of Thomas Dorr developed into an armed rebellion, which eventually forced the state government to adopt universal suffrage.

13. 3 Suffragist groups existed all over the country and under many different names but their aim was the same: to achieve the right to vote for women through constitutional, peaceful means.

14. The library was begun on August 26, 1943, when the Radcliffe College alumna Maud Wood Park '98, a former suffragist, donated her collection of books, papers, and memorabilia on female reformers to Radcliffe.

15. By the early twentieth century, new leaders, including Carrie Chapman Catt and Anna Howard Shaw, emerged and suffragists devised innovative tactics in the struggle for the right to vote, including suffrage parades and open-air meetings

16. List of peace Activists; List of political dissidents; List of suffragists and suffragettes; List of women's rights Activists; List of women pacifists and peace Activists This page was last edited on 3 June 2020, at 20:16 (UTC)

17. From exhibits inside the Arizona Capitol Museum to a gathering on the North Carolina Statehouse lawn, many Commemorations, including those that moved online because of the coronavirus pandemic, have highlighted a more nuanced history of the American women’s suffrage movement alongside the traditional tributes to well-known suffragists such as Susan B