Lexicographical Neighbors of Intransigeance
Literary usage of Intransigeance
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The New York Review by St. Joseph's Seminary (Yonkers, N.Y.), N.Y. St. Joseph's Seminary (Yonkers (1907)
"Rigidity and intransigeance, in rejecting fresh explanations of dogma and ...
A temporary intransigeance succeeded by partial assimilation of what she has ..."
2. Index to the Periodicals of ...American periodicals - (1902)
"Nov, 315 Inns of Court, see under law Inquisition, see under Spam (History)
Inquisitiones Post Mortem : intransigeance. London Inquisitiones Pust Mortem, ..."
3. The American Historical Review by American Historical Association (1903)
"... its own infallibility and continuing inspiration ; and the intransigeance of
the Stuarts, equally convinced of their divine right to govern absolutely. ..."
4. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann (1913)
"His absolute realism and his intransigeance caused him to be looked on in David's
school as an eccentric and revolutionary individual. ..."
5. The Quarterly Review by George Walter Prothero, John Gibson Lockhart, William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, Baron Rowland Edmund Prothero Ernle, Sir William Smith (1907)
"Cardinal Cullen in Ireland, quite as much as Archbishop Manning in England, upheld
a policy of absoluteness and intransigeance in the intellectual domain. ..."
6. An Introduction to the History of Medicine: With Medical Chronology by Fielding Hudson Garrison (1921)
"There is, further, the intransigeance and distrust of the native population, lack
of funds on the part of the government, and a conviction of forty ..."