Lexicographical Neighbors of Spokesmanship
Literary usage of Spokesmanship
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 (1887)
"These were the classes who were encouraged to come to the front, and to assume
the spokesmanship for the rest of India, during the late viceroyalty. ..."
2. The New York Times Current History (1917)
"That same spokesmanship for the average man of many regions, the man of the little
parlor with the melodeon or parlor organ, the plush-bound photograph ..."
3. The Fortnightly Review (1869)
"... yet held the spokesmanship at law, and one day as men went thronging to the
Hill of Laws, and when the giving forth of the law had been ended, ..."
4. The Small Business Innovation Research Program: The First Decade (1993)
"... firms with fewer than 500 employees each) or in the level of spokesmanship
which they can achieve through existing groups and organizations. ..."
5. The Story of the Irish Race: A Popular History of Ireland by Seumas MacManus (1921)
"... the revolutionary advocates of agitation, of whom O'Connell assumed the
spokesmanship. The great man was born in Cahirciveen in the southwest of Kerry. ..."
6. The Orient in Bible Times by Elihu Grant (1920)
"His spokesmanship for God was extra-national as a great prophet among the Hebrews
always conceived it. Jehovah is the majestic one terrifying the whole ..."
7. The Orient in Bible Times by Elihu Grant (1920)
"His spokesmanship for God was extra-national as a great prophet among the Hebrews
always conceived it. Jehovah is the majestic one terrifying the whole ..."