Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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This is a small country called the Republic of Liberia.
Liberia's Ruling Party Denies 'Connections' to Elections Commission 2011
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It was easy to learn because it was exactly like the Pledge of Allegiance to the Republic of Liberia.
The House at Sugar Beach Helene Cooper 2009
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It was easy to learn because it was exactly like the Pledge of Allegiance to the Republic of Liberia.
The House at Sugar Beach Helene Cooper 2009
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It was easy to learn because it was exactly like the Pledge of Allegiance to the Republic of Liberia.
The House at Sugar Beach Helene Cooper 2009
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It was easy to learn because it was exactly like the Pledge of Allegiance to the Republic of Liberia.
The House at Sugar Beach Helene Cooper 2009
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The answer comes rumbling back to us, over the towering billows of the Atlantic, from the Republic of Liberia, with a voice that starts our inmost souls, falling with ponderous weight upon the ears of the free colored people of this Union -- "thou art the man, thou art the woman."
The Journal of Negro History, Volume 1, January 1916 Various
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Colonization Society, for the State of Ohio, to solicit funds to aid its operations, begs leave to call attention to the statistical facts, in reference to the position which this State occupies, in relation to the free colored population of the United States, and the interest which she has in sustaining the Republic of Liberia.
The Journal of Negro History, Volume 1, January 1916 Various
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In 1877, Dr. Blyden was made minister plenipotentiary of the Republic of Liberia at the Court of St. James and was received by Her Majesty July 30, 1878.
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After nearly forty years of experimenting with the free colored people, by others, colonizationists still find themselves circumscribed in their operations, to their original design of building up the Republic of Liberia, as the only rational hope of the elevation of the African race -- the prospects of general emancipation being a thousand-fold more gloomy in 1859 than they were in 1817.
Cotton is King, and Pro-Slavery Arguments Comprising the Writings of Hammond, Harper, Christy, Stringfellow, Hodge, Bledsoe, and Cartrwright on This Important Subject E. N. [Editor] Elliott
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There are but few more interesting spots in Africa than the little corner of the west coast occupied by the Republic of Liberia.
History of Liberia Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science John Hanson Thomas McPherson
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