¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Exoduses
1. exodus [n] - See also: exodus
Lexicographical Neighbors of Exoduses
Literary usage of Exoduses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Human Costs of the War by Homer Folks (1920)
"... the exoduses of 1914 and 1918; repatriation; under the enemy army; how
devastation came about; how much is there of it?; her soldier dead; cripples; ..."
2. Mysteries and Miseries of America's Great Cities: Embracing New York by James William Buel (1883)
"... on account of hard times they have made two well-organized and general exoduses
from several Southern States, once to Kansas, and again to Arkansas, ..."
3. A Discussion of the Cause, Character and Operations of the Creator: What and by Harry B. Philbrook (1887)
"... people—The work of destruction—Where the exoduses from the country took
place—Cause of them—Origin of the Romans—Origin of the Spaniards—Beasts occupied ..."
4. Rudiments of a Vocabulary of Egyptian Hieroglyphics by Samuel Sharpe (1837)
"The same; “The deified queen - deceased in the boat of Ba,” FI 57, 17; “The
exoduses of the boat of Ba,” FI 58, 45. This and the two preceding groups ..."
5. Egyptian Hieroglyphics: Being an Attempt to Explain Their Nature, Origin by Samuel Sharpe (1837)
"The same; " The exoduses and coronations of the boat of Ra," EI4,5. 533.
The same; " The deified queen deceased in the boat of Ra," EI 57, 17; ..."
6. Enforcing Restraint: Collective Intervention in Internal Conflicts by Lori Fisler Damrosch (1993)
"See General Assembly resolution 45/153, Human Rights and Mass exoduses (adopted
without a vote on December 18, 1990). Among other things, that resolution ..."
7. Project 2015: Power and Progress edited by Patrick M Cronin (1997)
"While the principal responsibility for responding to mass refugee exoduses will
continue to fall to non-governmental organizations supplemented by the ..."
8. The Life of Thomas Jefferson by Henry Stephens Randall (1871)
"... were purely religious exoduses. The exiles left their native land, or that
where they temporarily sojourned, and made their settlements in New England, ..."