Nghĩa của từ negroes bằng Tiếng Anh

noun
1
a member of a dark-skinned group of peoples originally native to Africa south of the Sahara.

Đặt câu với từ "negroes"

Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "negroes", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ negroes, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ negroes trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh

1. White supremacists devise new Methods: To disenfranchise Negroes.

2. White supremacists devise new methods to disenfranchise Negroes.

3. 2 White supremacists devise new Methods: To disenfranchise Negroes.

4. 1 White supremacists devise new methods to disenfranchise Negroes.

5. The negroes fled, the luckless Lou wailing into her apron.

6. What does Beneatha mean by "Assimilationist Negroes"? act 2

7. 20 Washington was recognized as the preeminent spokesman of American Negroes by 18

8. The officers of the law Accommodatingly indicated the right Negroes, and the mob dragged them out

9. Africanize (verb) to place under the domination of Africans or negroes How to pronounce Africanize?

10. The sexton reached out to push him into his seat, but two other Negroes intervened.

11. Discrimination is a hellhound that gnaws at Negroes in every waking moment of their lives.

12. They used the devices of anthropology, sociology, history, and biology trying to prove that Negroes were inferior.

13. However much we pretended that Indians and Negroes were subhuman, we really knew that they were God's children too.

14. Bahamians the inhabitants of the Bahama Islands in the Caribbean Sea, totaling 144,000 persons (1967 estimate); 85 percent are Negroes and mulattoes

15. King said; "Two days out of every three we were guarded by a gang of ignorant and Cruelsome negroes

16. A hellhound never any more than gnaw at Negroes, 1 Waking moment of every life is waiting for your help, Obama!

17. Emmick, Defending the Wilderness: Two days out of every three, the prisoners were guarded by a gang of ignorant and Cruelsome Negroes

18. "A Cudgelling match between English & French Negroes in the island of Dominica" The New York Public Library Digital Collections.1810.

19. The Significance of Africanisms by Melville Herskovits is an in depth analysis of African Cultural survivals among the Negroes of the United States

20. The boss said "We keep only enough whites so we can control the negroes and keep them Agoing." Lowden Canning Co

21. The slave owners don’t want free negroes near them, and the Abolitionised States of the North-west are passing laws against their settling there

22. EASTERN NIGHTS - AND FLIGHTS ALAN BOTT Even to-day the masses of the Negroes see all too clearly the anomalies of their position and the moral Crookedness of yours

23. EASTERN NIGHTS - AND FLIGHTS ALAN BOTT Even to-day the masses of the Negroes see all too clearly the anomalies of their position and the moral Crookedness of yours

24. But there is no rule of law in the Jim Crow South, not when Negroes are denied housing, turned away from schools, hospitals, and not when we are lynched.

25. Lincoln clear up and refute the charges that he was an Abolitionist, and an Amalgamationist, and in favor of placing negroes upon a social and political equality with the whites.

26. Of our camel-men, some were Bedouin and some were negroes, and we found them on the whole honest and obliging, though with the usual keen eye for a possible Bakshish, which is not uncommon elsewhere.

27. Chief Benge was particularly interested in capturing and taking North Negroes whom he could sell for a price, and the presence of slaves on the Livingston plantation had interested him in risking the attack

28. ECOMMERCE AND SEO: PAST, PRESENT, AND POST COVID-19 JIM YU MAY 19, 2020 SEARCH ENGINE WATCH The Negroes seemed to be more easily Adaptable to hard, manual labor than the Indians or indentured white servants had been.

29. There is no authority for the contention that colonization promoted emancipation when the records show that the majority of slaveholders who supported it had in mind the expatriation of the free Negroes who among the Bondmen were a living testimony against slavery.

30. In Civilising Subjects, Catherine Hall argues that the idea of empire was at the heart of mid-nineteenth-century British self-imagining, with peoples such as the "Aborigines" in Australia and the "negroes" in Jamaica serving as markers of difference separating "civilised" English from "savage" others.