¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Fraternizations
1. fraternization [n] - See also: fraternization
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fraternizations
Literary usage of Fraternizations
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Forty Years of American Life by Thomas Low Nichols (1864)
"Political fraternizations. —Influence of bishops and clergy.—The Irish on the
negro question.—Politics of the Germans.—Prolific races.—British residents. ..."
2. The Contemporary Review (1866)
"... those oily platform fraternizations, which, as far as our experience has gone,
are strictly confined to the two hours of the public meeting. ..."
3. The Annual Register edited by Edmund Burke (1833)
"... illegal fraternizations, and symbols of criminal opposition,” by which it was
stated to have been characterized—and declaring its determination to ..."
4. The New York Times Current History (1918)
"This internationalist convention was still too nationalist for the mysterious
men who, since the preceding May, had never ceased to engineer fraternizations ..."
5. Mercersburg Review by Reformed Church in the United States Publications Board, German Reformed Church in the United States (1857)
"... and the essential brotherhood of the race, and are prophetic of the still
greater possible achievements and fraternizations of the future. ..."
6. Life of Reverdy Johnson by Bernard Christian Steiner (1914)
"... his fraternizations with unworthy persons, his post-prandial oratory, and his
difficulties of all kinds about dinners, to the contrary notwithstanding. ..."