¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Subversions
1. subversion [n] - See also: subversion
Lexicographical Neighbors of Subversions
Literary usage of Subversions
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Martin's History of France: The Decline of the French Monarchy by Henri Martin (1866)
"New Monetary and Economic Subversions. Archbishop Tressan. New Persecutions
against the Protestants. Income Tax of One-fiftieth. New Rupture with Spain. ..."
2. Martin's History of France: The Decline of the French Monarchy by Henri Martin (1866)
"SECTION 1.—MONSIEUR LE Dec. — Government of Madame dc Prie and Paris Duver- nei.
New Monetary and Economic Subversions. ..."
3. Martin's History of France: The Decline of the French Monarchy by Henri Martin (1866)
"MONSIEUR LE Dec. — Government of Madame de Prie and Paris Duver- nei. New Monetary
and Economic Subversions. ..."
4. The Passions of the Human Soul by Charles Fourier, John Reynell Morell, Hugh Doherty (1851)
"THE SAME PARALLEL APPLIED TO Subversions. THE most evident truths are often the
last that are discovered. How comes it that men who have pretended to study ..."
5. The Philosophy of History by Augustus Schade, Rudolf Rocholl (1899)
"Its season of prime brought to bloom a mass of involutions and subversions becoming
ever more complicated, in which the plan and task of history seemed to ..."
6. The Decline of the French Monarchy by Henri Martin (1866)
"New Monetary and Economic Subversions. Archbishop Tressan. New Persecutions
against the Protestants. Income Tax of One-fiftieth. New Rupture with Spain. ..."
7. An Outline of a System of Natural Theology by George Crabbe (1840)
"But can it be supposed for a moment, that twelve t violent subversions of this
crust, through the action of such wild powers, could have each contributed, ..."
8. An Outline of a System of Natural Theology by George Crabbe (1840)
"... violent subversions of this crust, through the action of such wild powers,
could have each contributed, in a progressive ratio, to bring the earth into ..."