Lexicographical Neighbors of Insubordinates
Literary usage of Insubordinates
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Social Welfare Forum: Official Proceedings [of The] Annual Meeting by Conference of Charities and Correction (U.S.), National Conference on Social Welfare, American Social Science Association, National Conference of Social Work (U.S.) (1902)
"This makes a total of 250 insubordinates. The Aged and Infirm Poor.— Nearly all
of these are kept in county poorhouses. One Old Ladies' Home is maintained ..."
2. Proceedings of the National Conference of Charities and Correction, at the by National Conference of Charities and Correction (U.S.). Session (1898)
"We have three State institutions for insubordinates: one State Industrial School
for Boys at Kearney, the average number of inmates being 211 ; one Girls' ..."
3. Annual Report by New Haven (Conn.). Board of Education (1883)
"Under this head are embraced (1) truants or insubordinates, (2) those who are
successively irregular either for lack of clothing or on account of ..."
4. Proceedings by Royal Colonial Institute (Great Britain) (1896)
"From a list of offences committed by these insubordinates during the first century
only of the occupation of Malta, we find the crimes (often dealt with by ..."
5. The Cambridge Modern History by Adolphus William Ward, George Walter Prothero (1907)
"Similarly, the number of recalcitrants, insubordinates, and deserters rose in
proportion to the number of the levies. At certain moments the number of ..."
6. The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science by Johns Hopkins University (1912)
"... his class he is to a certain extent ostracised; so it results that a large
majority of exemplary cadets are ruled by a small minority of insubordinates. ..."