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Definition of Delawarian
1. Noun. A native or resident of Delaware.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Delawarian
Literary usage of Delawarian
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Second Visit to the United States of North America by Charles Lyell (1849)
"The Delawarian remarked that this was cheering news, because the recent bad
success of his race in Hayti had been used as an argument by the southern ..."
2. The Domestic Slave Trade of the Southern States by Winfield Hazlitt Collins (1904)
"to every Delawarian and Eastern Shore of Mary- lander. A son-in-law of hers was
hanged for the murder of a negro trader. His widow then married one Joe ..."
3. Men and Things I Saw in Civil War Days by James Fowler Rusling (1899)
"The one was a Delawarian, and worthy of Delaware—the home of the whipping post
still—smoothbore and narrow-gauge, a master of red tape. ..."
4. Universal Geography: Or A Description of All Parts of the World, on a New by Conrad Malte-Brun (1827)
"... Delawarian, and the Greenland. General «fli- nit у of the conjugations.
This astonishing uniformity in so singular a method of forming the conjugations, ..."
5. The Life of (John) Conrad Weiser, the German Pioneer, Patriot, and Patron of by Clement Zwingli Weiser (1876)
"... a Delawarian Chief, uttered in the month of July : " I was deceived by Conrad
Weiser, who promised to give me notice (to call on the Governor), ..."