Some example sentences of “slave”

How to use in-sentence of “slave”:

+ Also, many workers feared that slave labor would take away work for white workers.

+ Its inhabitants have suffered famines, civil war, slave raids, and near total loss of forests.

+ This is similar to the free use of female slaves on slave ships by the crews.

+ The abolition of the African slave trade was his main hope.Tim Holmes: “The History” in: “Spectrum Guide to Zambia”.

+ In 1750, William Brown, a slave-owner in Framingham, put out an advertisement about a runaway slave named Crispus.

+ Many Africans were brought to the United States in the slave trade.

+ Slave breeding became more important in the United States the 19th century when the Atlantic slave trade ended.

Some example sentences of slave
Some example sentences of slave

Example sentences of “slave”:

+ Congress could however, levy a “Per capita” duty of up to ten dollars for each slave imported into the country.

+ Many victims are told that their families will be harmed if they report the slave owners.

+ Her mother was Hannah Stanley Haywood, a slave in the home of prominent landowner George Washington Haywood.

+ The SS selected some strong, healthy people to be slave workers.

+ Before that time it was said to be a slave market.

+ After 1850, Southern slaveholders had been lobbying for the reopening of the slave trade.

+ In January 1861, her experiences were finally published as a book called “Incidents in the Life of Slave Girl, written by herself.” After the American Civil War had started in April 1861, she went to Alexandria, Virginia.

+ Abolitionists had ample evidence Slave Power wanted to extend slavery to all the states and even the hemisphere.

+ Hansen’s notable work for “Dateline” includes coverage of the Columbine High School massacreColumbine massacre, the Oklahoma City terrorist attack, the Unabomber and the TWA Flight 800 disaster; as well as investigative reports on Indian child slave labor and on counterfeit prescription drug sales in China.

+ In short, the Fugitive Slave act gave Southern states the power over the laws of Northern states by using the federal government to do their bidding.

+ Congress could however, levy a "Per capita" duty of up to ten dollars for each slave imported into the country.

+ Many victims are told that their families will be harmed if they report the slave owners.
+ Her mother was Hannah Stanley Haywood, a slave in the home of prominent landowner George Washington Haywood.

+ During the years 1822 and 1824, the boat was in the West Africa Squadron, where it chased slave ships.

+ He travelled north to Great Slave Lake on a boat or a canoe.

+ Other ships just worked the slave trade.

+ Some pointed out that slave owners provided food and clothes for their slaves, something that northern employers did not do.

+ The 1850 Fugitive Slave Law caused outrage in the Northern States.

+ The abolitionist John Brown John Brown who played a part in Bleeding Kansas, seized the slave uprising in the South.

+ In Article I, section 2 of the United States Constitution, calling slaves by the euphemism “all other persons”, the founders counted each slave as three-fifths of a person.

More in-sentence examples of “slave”:

+ Power of Suggestion: Stanley gets hypnotized by a magician during Edge City’s Fluff Ball, but Kablamus crashes the party just before the hypnotist can reverse the spell, giving Kablamus the perfect opportunity to use Stanley as his personal slave during the Fluff Parade to get back at Mayor Tilton for not choosing him as the grand marshall.

+ I quickly filled in the Great Slave Lake red link and made a few small simplifications.

+ It is about a British officer who is captured by the Japanese during World War II, held prisoner, used as slave labour and tortured.

+ Then it flows north into Great Slave Lake.

+ Bristol was a centre for the slave trade.

+ To call out a Slave Monster, a Slave Master must put blood into the crystal by pushing his or her thumb to the crystal and pledging.

+ However, some evidence suggests that Attucks was born a slave in Framingham, Massachusetts, but escaped from slavery.

+ It put an end to the slave trade in Washington, D.C.

+ Douglas, one of the sponsors of the Kansas–Nebraska Act inserted it in the new law as a measure to balance slave and free states.

+ It is the teaching that, since the Fall of Man, every person who has been born into the world is a slave of sin and, without the irresistible grace of God, it is not possible for man to choose to follow God or accept salvation as He freely offers it.

+ The countries that controlled most of the slave trade were European and Asian countries that were very powerful at the time.

+ Toussaint was known for being a slave until the start of the Revolution.

+ There was a poem in the book about slave trader brought people from Africa to America.

+ The Southern states were completely convinced the North would not follow the slave laws.

+ In “Diseases and Peculiarities of the Negro Race”, Cartwright points out that the Bible calls for a slave to obey his master, and that if he does, the slave won’t want to run away.

+ This became one of the main causes of the African slave trade.

+ This was inconvenient for slave owning politicians.

+ There is the nesting site of a flock of Whooping Cranes south of Great Slave Lake, in a remote corner of Wood Buffalo National Park.

+ In late 1836, Adams began a campaign to ridicule slave owners and the gag rule.

+ New York City was a center for this illegal slave trade, and judges in New York avoided punishing slave traders through the 19th century.

+ The slave trade was very profitable for slave traders.

+ Her family’s slave owner was Colonel Hardenbergh.

+ Scholars of Islamic law have condemned the revival of the slave trade of non-Muslim women by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

+ This area was used heavily in the African slave trade.

+ In 1860, North Carolina was a slave state.

+ They started slave trade after the first European contact with America in 1492 to supply settlers from there with workers.

+ He was also going to become Augeias’ slave if the work was not done in one day.

+ With an equal number of slave states and free states, the Senate was equally divided on issues important to the South.

+ This led to an increase in slave revolts, especially in the 1860s and 1880s, which forced the government to change the system in order to keep the country stable.

+ While she was doing that work, she also wrote a famous book called “Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl”.

+ A slightly different theme of master and slave is also used by the Ancient Greeceancient Greek philosopher Plato.

+ The Northern states permanently stopped slavery between 1780 and 1804, leaving the slave states of the South as defenders of the “The Peculiar Institutionpeculiar institution.” The Second Great Awakening, beginning about 1800, made evangelicalism a force behind different social reform movements, including abolitionism.

+ William Waller’s father was “Colonel” William Waller, who owned a slave named Hopping George, a description consistent with a foot injury.

+ Equally, the last Linear B documents in the Aegean reported a large rise in piracy, slave raiding and other attacks, particularly around Anatolia.

+ Attitudes toward slavery were shifting; a clause in the Constitution protected the African slave trade only until 1808.

+ Notable people from Bury St Edmunds include artist and printer Sybil Andrews, actor Bob Hoskins, theatre director Peter Hall Sir Peter Hall, artist and water deviner abolition of the slave trade.

+ Arab slave trade refers to the practice of slavery in the Arab world.

+ She gives birth to Kullervo who will be a slave of Untamo.

+ While the later Atlantic slave trade concentrated on men for labor, the Arab slave trade shifted over time to concentrate more on woman and young girls for sexual purposes.

+ Togo was a hub of the Atlantic slave trade for Europeans.

+ They might have to wait in these forts, which were like prisons, for months before slave ships arrived.

+ Like a Master, a Slave Master shares a life with its protector.

+ Starting from the 16th century, the coast was used for slave trade.

+ This happened because Johnson lived with a slave named Julia Chinn, had two children with her, and treated her like his wife.

+ An African former indentured servant who settled in Virginia in 1621, Anthony Johnson, became one of the earliest documented slave owners in the American colonies.

+ The 2010 documentary “The Dark Side of Chocolate” found that Nestlé purchases cocoa beans from Ivory Coast plantations that use child slave labour.

+ Southerners feared a slave rebellion like the one on Haiti only a few decades earlier.

+ Born as Anakin Skywalker, a slave on the desert planet Tatooine who became a Jedi.

+ In 1845, the United States Congress voted to admit Texas as a slave state, which made it the country’s 28th state.

+ Power of Suggestion: Stanley gets hypnotized by a magician during Edge City's Fluff Ball, but Kablamus crashes the party just before the hypnotist can reverse the spell, giving Kablamus the perfect opportunity to use Stanley as his personal slave during the Fluff Parade to get back at Mayor Tilton for not choosing him as the grand marshall.

+ I quickly filled in the Great Slave Lake red link and made a few small simplifications.
+ It is about a British officer who is captured by the Japanese during World War II, held prisoner, used as slave labour and tortured.

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