¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Preambles
1. preamble [n] - See also: preamble
Lexicographical Neighbors of Preambles
Literary usage of Preambles
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Pennsylvania Common School Law by Chester Case Bashore (1906)
"Preambles 90o. Appropriation for schools among Cornplanter Indians 9o1. ...
Preambles 424 9o2. Commission to be appointed by governor 424 9o3. ..."
2. A History of Crime in England: Illustrating the Changes of the Laws in the by Luke Owen Pike (1873)
"Preambles of statutes and statements made in Parliament have frequently been used
in illustration of the condition of the country, and they are very ..."
3. View of the State of Europe During the Middle Ages by Henry Hallam (1837)
"288-304. words of their preambles. This consent was originally given only by the
higher estates, who might be considered, ш a large sense, as representing ..."
4. Collapse and Reconstruction: European Conditions and American Principles by Thomas Barclay (1919)
"... TO CHAPTER X NOTE ON Preambles TO DIFFERENT INTERNATIONAL CONVENTIONS RELATING
TO WAR AND PEACE The following preambles to international conventions may ..."
5. Religion and the State, Or, The Bible and the Public Schools by Samuel Thayer Spear (1876)
"Preambles TO STATE CONSTITUTIONS. Reference is sometimes made to the recognitions
and acknowledgments of God found in the preambles to our State ..."
6. Religion and the State: Or, The Bible and the Public Schools by Samuel Thayer Spear (1876)
"Preambles TO STATE CONSTITUTIONS. Reference is sometimes made to the recognitions
and acknowledgments of God found in the preambles to our State ..."
7. The Law of Nations Considered as Independent Political Communities by Travers Twiss (1861)
"... 1856— Preambles and Recitals of a Declaratory Character—Objections to the Idea
of any Law, as such, between Nations—International Morality distinct from ..."