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Definition of Bipartizan
1. Adjective. Supported by both sides. "A two-way treaty"
Lexicographical Neighbors of Bipartizan
Literary usage of Bipartizan
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The People's Law by William Jennings Bryan (1914)
"The election boards should be bipartizan, beginning with the judges who preside
... And a bipartizan board, to deserve the name, must be composed of members ..."
2. The Boss and the Machine: A Chronicle of the Politicians and Party Organization by Samuel Peter Orth (1919)
"It is doubtful if any device was ever more deceiving and less satisfactory than
the bipartizan board. ,~- — The reader must not be led to think that any one ..."
3. The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine by Roy J. Friedman Mark Twain Collection (Library of Congress) (1913)
"... our present party conditions insure the absolute powerlessness of the people
when faced by a bipartizan combine of the two boss-ridden party machines, ..."
4. The Literary Digest History of the World War: Compiled from Original and (1920)
"... signed by twenty-eight Senators. to vote for the bipartizan conference
reservation on Article X. an a compromise to obtain ratification of the Treaty; ..."
5. Forty Years of It by Brand Whitlock (1914)
"... the machines of the two parties were working well together in the legislature—in
one of those bipartizan alliances which were not to be understood until ..."