Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun The
Saxon domain orrace .
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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It is known that some twenty years ago a thrill of horror shot through all Anglo-Saxondom at the reported physical condition of the operatives in English mines and factories.
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 07, No. 39, January, 1861 Various
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And with that good Mrs. Birch put on a graciousness of smile worthy of the most experienced female Boniface in Anglo-Saxondom.
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Anglo-Saxondom, there in his supreme moment, his splendid position, on the top of an omnibus lumbering west out of Trafalgar Square.
The Imperialist Sara Jeannette Duncan
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Modern Anglo-Saxondom and old Cathay touch eaves with each other.
Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 17, No. 101, May, 1876 Various
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Anglo-Saxondom was smiling through its tears and saying: 'That's just like us.
By the Christmas Fire Samuel McChord Crothers
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He was in the habit of reading his stories and poems to her for her opinion and decision, before publication, and it may well be that her hearty laughter and warm approval helped to strengthen his wavering opinion of the lines which convulsed Anglo-Saxondom; for no one was more surprised than he at the sensation they created.
A Tramp Through the Bret Harte Country Thomas Dykes Beasley
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It has given to the South American Republics, to men of Latin temperament and not acclimated to the vigorous, virile rules of government which we have established in the ordering of our own households throughout Anglo-Saxondom, a freedom which they would not have had otherwise.
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I am against both Anglophobia and Anglomania, but I am heart and soul for Anglo-Saxondom.
The Tie That Binds 1919
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This, however, is a dream of the future: for the present be it said that a regenerated Mexico has saved Central and South America from being finally swamped by Anglo-Saxondom, and has ensured the perpetuation in "The Land of To-morrow" of the Spanish tongue and Latin traditions.
Mexico Its Ancient and Modern Civilisation, History, Political Conditions, Topography, Natural Resources, Industries and General Development Martin [Editor] Hume 1919
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My business, however, is not with the culture of Anglo-Saxondom, but only with Conrad's place therein.
A Book of Prefaces 1918
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