¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Sandlotter
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sandlotter
Literary usage of Sandlotter
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Recollections of a Newspaperman: A Record of Life and Events in California by Frank Aleamon Leach (1917)
"... a "sandlotter." I mean this latter in no disrespectful sense, for there were
some good men sent from the sandlots in' San Francisco. ..."
2. Literary California, Poetry, Prose and Portraits by Ella Sterling Mighels (1918)
"Although a "sandlotter" in his sympathies, yet Mr. Dorney was so affected by this
scene, he wrote this tribute to her memory. It first appeared anonymously ..."
3. Literary California, Poetry, Prose and Portraits by Ella Sterling Mighels (1918)
"Although a "sandlotter" in his sympathies, yet Mr. Dorney was so affected by this
scene, he wrote this tribute to her memory. It first appeared anonymously ..."
4. Literary California, Poetry, Prose and Portraits by Ella Sterling Mighels (1918)
"Although a "sandlotter" in his sympathies, yet Mr. Dorney was so affected by this
scene, he wrote this tribute to her memory. It first appeared anonymously ..."
5. Recollections of a Newspaperman: A Record of Life and Events in California by Frank Aleamon Leach (1917)
"... a "sandlotter." I mean this latter in no disrespectful sense, for there were
some good men sent from the sandlots in' San Francisco. ..."
6. Literary California, Poetry, Prose and Portraits by Ella Sterling Mighels (1918)
"Although a "sandlotter" in his sympathies, yet Mr. Dorney was so affected by this
scene, he wrote this tribute to her memory. It first appeared anonymously ..."
7. Literary California, Poetry, Prose and Portraits by Ella Sterling Mighels (1918)
"Although a "sandlotter" in his sympathies, yet Mr. Dorney was so affected by this
scene, he wrote this tribute to her memory. It first appeared anonymously ..."
8. Literary California, Poetry, Prose and Portraits by Ella Sterling Mighels (1918)
"Although a "sandlotter" in his sympathies, yet Mr. Dorney was so affected by this
scene, he wrote this tribute to her memory. It first appeared anonymously ..."