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Definition of Immigrant class
1. Noun. Recent immigrants who are lumped together as a class by their low socioeconomic status in spite of different cultural backgrounds.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Immigrant Class
Literary usage of Immigrant class
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Condition of Women and Children Among the Celtic, Gothic, and Other Nations by John MacElheran (1858)
"Take Boston, for instance: the immigrant class constitute about one third of the
population; but, of the unfortunately very large numbers of persons engaged ..."
2. Journal of Social Science by American Social Science Association, Franklin Benjamin Sanborn, Frederick Stanley Root, Isaac Franklin Russell (1906)
"What is New York doing in its public schools for the immigrant class? With the
steadily increasing numbers of immigrants alien to us in speech and habits, ..."
3. Journal of Social Science by Franklin Benjamin Sanborn, Frederick Stanley Root, American Social Science Association, Isaac Franklin Russell (1906)
"What is New York doing in its public schools for the immigrant class? With the
steadily increasing numbers of immigrants alien to us in speech and habits, ..."
4. Poems of the English Race by Raymond Macdonald Alden (1921)
"Compare the poetic argument for a liberal attitude toward the immigrant class,
with that expressed in Aldrich's poem, page 366. ..."
5. The Immigration Problem: A Study of American Immigration Conditions and Needs by Jeremiah Whipple Jenks, William Jett Lauck, Rufus Daniel Smith (1922)
"In addition, a large number of farmers and farm laborers of the immigrant class
of the nationalities mentioned settled in all parts of the Dominion without ..."
6. Man and the State, Studies in Applied Sociology: Popular Lectures and by Brooklyn Ethical Association (1892)
"The opportunity for disruption of American institutions by foreign radicals of
the immigrant class is of the slightest. due in large measure to leaders who ..."
7. Sessional Papers by Ontario Legislative Assembly (1906)
"THE UNDESIRABLE immigrant class. There is marked evidence that public attention
should be called to the large number of undesirable and unsuitable ..."