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Examples

  • Traditionally, the term Nationalist had a very catholic meaning in the Welsh context: it tended to be used to mean a person who favoured any kind of self-governance for Wales.

    A letter to the Conservatives 2008

  • Above all else, though, Labour must now seek to warn people about the ultimate threat from a confident, two-term Nationalist administration and they must be very insistent about it: a vote for the SNP could make it just five minutes to midnight on the toxic independence clock.

    Labour needs to challenge Alex Salmond – and quickly | Kevin McKenna 2011

  • Which on the surface being a Nationalist is not a bad thing.

    A new form of Christian evangelism: atheist conferences « Anglican Samizdat 2010

  • It just seems easier to drop the word Nationalist than trying to explain it isn't to do with racism?

    Why do so many people hate the SNP? Jeff 2009

  • It will listen to no reformer, to no philosopher, to no preacher, until the demand of the Nationalist is granted.

    The Perils of Partition 2003

  • It will listen to no reformer, to no philosopher, to no preacher, until the demand of the Nationalist is granted.

    The Perils of Partition 2003

  • Moreover while the treaty commits the United States to the defence of Formosa and the Pescadores Islands it is most discreetly silent on the question of the other offshore islands which are still in Nationalist hands.

    The United States and Co-Existence 1954

  • I had intended to speak on the subject of which the heading would have been "Imperialist Centripetal and Centrifugal Forces," and to have tried to emphasize-as we all ought to do-the fact that to be a good Canadian Nationalist is not at all incompatible with being a good British Imperialist.

    Toronto and Town Planning 1911

  • People forget that when these two parties formed they were called the Nationalist Republicans and the Democratic Republicans.

    Millions of White House e-mails recovered 2009

  • Traditionally, the term Nationalist had a very catholic meaning in the Welsh context: it tended to be used to mean a person who favoured any kind of self-governance for Wales.

    Archive 2008-06-01 2008

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