townsman|townsmen in English

noun

[towns·man || 'taʊnzmən]

resident of a city, inhabitant of the same tow

Use "townsman|townsmen" in a sentence

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

1. Now I have a bailiff, a townsman ; he seems a practical fellow.

2. In this hostile environment, there were few opportunities for townsmen to accumulate capital.

3. Current, somewhat the townsman family of economic actual strength has the intense impulse buy a car.

4. Synonyms for Burgesses include citizens, burghers, denizens, inhabitants, residents, townsmen, dwellers, freemen, householders and locals

5. The townsmen developed no organizational bases comparable to those of Western cities, no craft guilds or town councils.

6. 16 The white snake"s tragedy is caused by feudal Confucianism durance, little townsman"s character defects and self ethical consciousness.

7. This made him extremely unpopular with his fellow townsmen because the pilgrimages to the Kaaba were the chief source of such prosperity as Mecca enjoyed.

8. THE MILITARY JOURNALS OF TWO PRIVATE SOLDIERS, 1758-1775 ABRAHAM TOMLINSON There was no trouble whatever in Billeting the men—the townsmen were quarrelling as to who should have them

9. During this legateship, when he was walking along preceded by the fasces , one of his fellow-townsmen, a man of Lepcis and a plebeian, embraced him as an old comrade.

10. 'guardsmen Cayser selfdoms Slavo-lettic Pro-irishism Ultra-french Mesitidae Menlo strabism scholiast stomenorrhagia leadoff townsmen Lespedeza klva JSW Mulderig vetchy salmonoid nonflowing feif swadder doits meths amentiferous Abjudging logaoedic leaky tactions uninhibiting unscarred pectination putterer pagrus Dedrick dittay whorry postmortal

11. ‘This placed an onerous tax burden on townsmen (taxation had been extended beyond Burgesses to resident non-Burgesses).’ ‘In March 1340 he travelled to London on community business, to show proof to the city authorities that Lynn Burgesses were exempt from murage exactions there.’

12. Civilian (n.) late 14c., "judge or authority on civil law," from noun use of Old French civilien "of the civil law," created from Latin civilis "relating to a citizen, relating to public life, befitting a citizen; popular, affable, courteous," alternative adjectival derivative of civis "townsman" (see city).Sense of "non-military and non-clerical person, one whose pursuits are those of