¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Mongrelizing
1. mongrelize [v] - See also: mongrelize
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mongrelizing
Literary usage of Mongrelizing
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. History of Political Conventions in California: 1849-1892 by Winfield J. Davis (1893)
"... that if we go on mixing and mongrelizing the people of this nation, as we have
been doing, and as sentimentalists would have us continue to- do, ..."
2. Theodore Roosevelt: The Logic of His Career by Charles Grenfill Washburn (1916)
"... negroes are equal men — thus revealing a faith in that "solidarity" which
Anglo-Saxons know can come only through the mongrelizing of their race. ..."
3. Why Europe Leaves Home: A True Account of the Reasons which Cause Central by Kenneth Lewis Roberts (1922)
"America wants no more shoals of foreigners cramming her slums, lowering her
standards of living, mongrelizing her population and sowing the seeds of ..."
4. History of Political Conventions in California, 1849-1892 by Winfield J. Davis (1893)
"And we warn our countrymen on both sides of the continent, that if we go on mixing
and mongrelizing the people of this nation, as we have been doing, ..."
5. Republic Or Empire? The Philippine Question by William Jennings Bryan (1899)
"But it would do such violence to our blood, to the history and traditions of our
race, and would leave such frightful results in mongrelizing our ..."
6. Race Or Mongrel: a Brief History of the Rise and Fall of the Ancient Races by Alfred Paul Karl Eduard Schultz (1908)
"... machine of antiquity, the empire called the Roman, did not succeed in mongrelizing
them." America will I not be able to destroy them. ..."
7. History of Political Conventions in California, 1849-1892 by Winfield J. Davis (1893)
"... that if we go on mixing and mongrelizing the people of this nation, as we have
been doing, and as sentimentalists would have us continue to do, ..."
8. The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-supremacy by Lothrop Stoddard (1920)
"Yet the mongrelizing tide sweeps steadily on. The Indian draws no "color line,"
and continually impairs the purity of his blood and the poise of his ..."