Lexicographical Neighbors of Renegading
Literary usage of Renegading
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1876)
"... reason would have condemned ; but, save in the proof of such partisanship, we
see in them nothing of moral turpitude, nothing of renegading rancor. ..."
2. History of Morgan's Cavalry by Basil Wilson Duke (1867)
"So far from renegading and pandering the Federal rule and success, the large
majority of this class would have pawned their souls for power to crush the ..."
3. The Salon: Letters on Art, Music, Popular Life and Politics in Paris by Heinrich Heine (1893)
"Or was it not very fanciful when people accused me of anti-liberal tendencies
and of renegading from the cause of freedom ? A printed expression of opinion ..."
4. The American Historical Register by Charles Henry Browning (1894)
"... or " renegading" as their enemies called it, to Kentucky still went persistently
on. The dangers to which these parties were exposed, ..."
5. The Life of Captain Sir Richd F. Burton by Isabel Burton (1893)
"... become an inveterate slave-dealer, impudently placing himself under native
protection, and renegading the flag that saved him from life-long servitude. ..."
6. Belgravia by Mary Elizabeth Braddon (1877)
"... his second, to endeavour to escape by ' renegading' (as I once heard a cockney
tradesman say, for retrograding—and a very good word too). ..."