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Definition of Liberal party
1. Noun. A political party in Australia, Canada, and other nations, and formerly in Great Britain.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Liberal Party
Literary usage of Liberal party
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Short History of England by Edward Potts Cheyney (1919)
"The old liberal party of Mr. Gladstone's time had been much influenced by the
growing up of younger men more interested in improving the position of the ..."
2. Europe Since 1815 by Charles Downer Hazen (1910)
"And the liberal party was in full process of disruption because of it ...
The crucial question was, how large the secession from the liberal party would be? ..."
3. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1889)
"THE liberal party. IN studying the domestic history of Great Britain, it is
interesting as well as useful to observe the alternating fortunes of political ..."
4. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann (1913)
"27 liberal party, the back-bone of which was the union of Christians called
variously the Christian Socialist Union and, in Vienna especially, ..."
5. Democracy and the Organization of Political Parties by Moisei Ostrogorski (1902)
"What I want to see in fact," he concluded, " is a Radical party in contradiction
to a liberal party."2 This conclusion exactly expressed the preoccupations ..."
6. Cyclopedia of American Government by Andrew Cunningham McLaughlin, Albert Bushnell Hart (1914)
"The liberal party, in the second decade of the twentieth century, is in the third
... From 1832 to 1886 the term liberal party included: (1) the Whigs, ..."
7. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1919)
"liberal party, in politics, the party which claims to be distinctively that of
... Most European countries have a liberal party, but in several of them, ..."