upton sinclair in English

noun

(1878-1968) United States author and social activist

Use "upton sinclair" in a sentence

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

1. You know, more than 100 years ago, Upton Sinclair wrote this.

2. This has not prevented Soviet readers from coupling him with Upton Sinclair as America's greatest novelists.

3. As if on cue, anothemail I got last week had the more intriguing title of "China's Upton Sinclair".

4. Upton Sinclair dwelt on "the inferno of exploitation" in Chicago's meat packing industry in "The Jungle" (190.

5. Upton Sinclair exposed the stomach-churning conditions of the Chicago stockyards in his 1905 novel The Jungle.

6. Writer Upton Sinclair coins the term white-collar, to describe workers whom he called "the petty underlings of the business world."

7. 174, When the poplar leaves Atremble Turn their edges to the light, 1906, Upton Sinclair, The Jungle, New York: Doubleday, Page, Chapter 15, p

8. Then, in 190 Upton Sinclair published his socialist novel, THE JUNGLE, aimed, as he later said, at people's hearts but hitting their stomachs instead.

9. Turns out American factory culture may not have changed enough since Upton Sinclair wrote "The Jungle," to stop bacterium-infected food products from hitting store shelves.

10. The fire had come only five years after Upton Sinclair published his book The Jungle, which detailed the plight of the workers at a meat packer's plant.

11. As I said, no surprise: as Upton Sinclair pointed out long ago, it's difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it.

12. Used with the impersonal subject it and a following clause or infinitive to indicate the occurrence of a usually unexpected or chance event: "Now it Chanced that this car-line was owned by gentlemen who were trying to make money" (Upton Sinclair).

13. For though some warriors of renown Continue Anthropophagous, 'Tis rare that human flesh goes down The low-caste man's aesophagus! THE PROFITS OF RELIGION, FIFTH EDITION UPTON SINCLAIR Garrigou and Filhol, has led both these savants to the opinion "that pre-historic man may have been Anthropophagous." PRIMITIVE MAN LOUIS FIGUIER