Lexicographical Neighbors of Revolutionizer
Literary usage of Revolutionizer
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Confederation of the British North American Provinces: Their Past by Thomas Rawlings (1865)
"Early Travelling—Steam a Revolutionizer—Length of Railway in England, Prance,
and the United States—Opening of the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad —Professor ..."
2. Annual Report by Columbus Horticultural Society, Columbus, Ohio (1894)
"Livingston's varieties include the Beauty, Acme, (the ear- iest,) Buckeye
State (medium early,) a smooth fine variety, and the Revolutionizer a very large ..."
3. The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare (1903)
"If there were one of these who rose supreme above his fellows, it was not
Shakespeare, but that pioneer of the poetic drama and revolutionizer of the ..."
4. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1918)
"Mendel, the revolutionizer of modern biology in all that relates to heredity,
was an Augustinian monk, who, in the midst of his scientific work, ..."
5. Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern by Charles Dudley Warner, Hamilton Wright Mabie, Lucia Isabella Gilbert Runkle, George H Warner (1902)
"This revolutionizer of agricultural methods learned the lessons he taught others,
through a series of personal disappointments. He was the inevitable martyr ..."
6. The Yale Literary Magazine by Lyman Hotchkiss Bagg, Yale University (1844)
"In many of our quiet and secluded villages, remote from the bustle and tumult of
the busy world, where the noise of the locomotive—that great revolutionizer ..."