¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Thralldoms
1. thralldom [n] - See also: thralldom
Lexicographical Neighbors of Thralldoms
Literary usage of Thralldoms
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Publications by Mississippi Historical Society (1918)
"Dominated by ambition and egotism above any fixed political principles, he was
just the man for the hour—to throw off the thralldoms of traditions and ..."
2. The History of Abraham Lincoln, and the Overthrow of Slavery by Isaac Newton Arnold (1866)
"... thralldoms, of liberated hope. The strata of this nation's sediment, coldness,
and oppression has been broken through. Human nature once more, ..."
3. The History of Abraham Lincoln, and the Overthrow of Slavery by Isaac Newton Arnold (1866)
"... a revolution in all its great outlines of enkindled faith, of continued
development, of overturned thralldoms, of liberated hope. ..."
4. Peasant Life in Germany by Anna Cummings Johnson (1858)
"... the instruments of consigning young and friendless girls to the most unendurable
of all thralldoms, who had no alternative but starvation or crime. ..."
5. The Orient Question To-day and To-morrow (1913)
"... whole populations to the wheel, creating at once fabulous riches for the few
and miseries and thralldoms for the many hitherto unknown in the world's ..."
6. Morning and Evening Exercises: Selected from the Published and Unpublished by Henry Ward Beecher, Lyman Abbott (1874)
"Having learned the lessons of this mor- o tal state and escaped from its lower
thralldoms, having come into the spiritualities of the heavenly realm; ..."