¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Southrons
1. southron [n] - See also: southron
Lexicographical Neighbors of Southrons
Literary usage of Southrons
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Scottish Chiefs by Jane Porter (1827)
"The southrons, little expecting an assault from an adversary they had so lately
driven off1 the field, were taken by surprise, but they fought well; ..."
2. American Lands and Letters by Donald Grant Mitchell (1899)
"... his physical buoyancy not broken down, living amid a great host of illusions ;
his mind placid, but distraught. southrons and Dr. Ware. ..."
3. The Scottish chiefs. Revised by Jane Porter (1862)
"It was at this period that the signal was given from the horn of Wallace ; and
the division of Graham meeting the retreating southrons as they attempted to ..."
4. Europe in the Nineteenth Century by Harry Pratt Judson (1901)
"NORTHMEN AND southrons. THE student of history knows that geography has Effect
of had a powerful influence on the development of civili- the course of ..."
5. Europe in the Nineteenth Century by Harry Pratt Judson (1894)
"NORTHMEN AND southrons. THE student of history knows that geography has had a
powerful influence on the development of civilization. ..."
6. Poetry, Lyrical, Narrative and Satirical, of the Civil War by Richard Grant White (1866)
"southrons." You can never win them back — Never! never! Though they perish on
the track Of your endeavor; Though their corses strew the earth That SMILED ..."