释义 |
Definition of frontiersman in English: frontiersmannounPlural frontiersmenˈfrʌntɪərzmənˌfrənˈtɪrzmən A man living in the region of a frontier, especially that between settled and unsettled country. (尤指居住在定居区和非定居区之间的)边疆男居民 Example sentencesExamples - It is conceivable that some hard-working early American frontiersman might hold to such a belief, but difficult to understand how such a contention could come out of Spain, of all places.
- Cherokee women and European traders or frontiersman sought each other to gain access to goods or territory and to cement alliances.
- Another carving from the 1850s is thought to have been the work of Kit Carson, the famous frontiersman.
- As a torchbearer of American history, Cooper saw the frontiersman as a dying breed; men caught between two worlds without a home.
- But so potent was the mythical figure that travelers encountering the slight, soft-spoken frontiersman came away disappointed.
- The idea of the frontier and 'the noble frontiersman' retain a strong, if largely subliminal, purchase on the imagination of a nation now overwhelmingly urban and increasingly cosmopolitan.
- Settling with this frontiersman is not necessarily settling for; waiting for the next would not be in misty, vain hope.
- It was seen as the key to the defence of Texas, and among those willing to protect it were Jim Bowie - renowned knife fighter - and David Crockett, the famous English frontiersman.
- The courage and honor, the militarism and violence of the 19th century frontiersman, soldier and cowboy remains part of the present day Texas culture, the Encyclopedia notes.
- But even if every tall tale were true, neither Crockett nor any other American frontiersman before or after had as much of an impact on American history as Christopher Carson.
- Tom Horn, legendary frontiersman, is wandering through the prairies of Wyoming.
- The legendary frontiersman is wandering through the prairies of Wyoming.
- Some of the most famous frontiersmen were Lewis and Clark and their Corps of Discovery expedition.
- Both countries, after all, have a tradition of the frontiersman.
- This inexhaustible source of pure water was a marvel to Indian and frontiersman alike prior to the 19th century.
- For about a month I was a spare, sinewy frontiersman in fringed buckskin, with crinkly little lines about the eyes and a slow laconic drawl…
- He argued that the typical Australian frontiersman was not a small, individualist farmer but a shearer or drover, and that his outlook was not individualist but collectivist.
- The conflict between frontiersman and aboriginal, between white and black, between the ‘native’ American citizen and the ethnic immigrant are largely effaced.
- Dressed once again as a frontiersman, he rode his horse to a site near Fort Jackson, which was under construction on the site of the old Fort Toulouse.
- The legendary frontiersman is seldom sober, and by the time of the siege he is too sick and delirious with typhoid to hold his eponymous knife.
- After the war, Lindsey had followed in the footsteps of frontiersman Daniel Boone and gone to Kentucky.
- Whereas the frontiersman, cowboy, and soldier protect the values of a culture, the mobster exploits freedom.
- The family narrative of revolutionary heroes and frontiersmen is undermined by the eventual disclosure of the family secret: their ancestral lands were purloined from the original, aboriginal owners.
- Initially the frontiersmen turned on the Indians in an attempt to move them off the land.
- In preparation for the attack the colonel had frontiersman Jim Beckwourth - a former slave - rousted from his Denver home and pressed into service (on pain of death) as an involuntary scout.
- It's hard to square our usual image of Stevens as a doggedly conscientious master of surety and fidelity with this carefree frontiersman.
- In the film, Green B. Jamison, another Kentucky frontiersman, will use an iron-mounted Tennessee rifle crafted in Branson's workshop.
- Goldwater loved for the Eastern press to write about him as a sort of frontiersman, and generally it obliged.
- Did veteran Canadian frontiersmen know the words and gestures that led to successful surrender to Iroquois warriors?
- It was a chaotic, frontiersman's existence, he said.
Synonyms settler, colonizer, colonial, frontierswoman, pioneer Definition of frontiersman in US English: frontiersmannounˌfrənˈtirzmənˌfrənˈtɪrzmən A man living in the region of a frontier, especially that between settled and unsettled country. (尤指居住在定居区和非定居区之间的)边疆男居民 Example sentencesExamples - Did veteran Canadian frontiersmen know the words and gestures that led to successful surrender to Iroquois warriors?
- Initially the frontiersmen turned on the Indians in an attempt to move them off the land.
- In the film, Green B. Jamison, another Kentucky frontiersman, will use an iron-mounted Tennessee rifle crafted in Branson's workshop.
- This inexhaustible source of pure water was a marvel to Indian and frontiersman alike prior to the 19th century.
- Dressed once again as a frontiersman, he rode his horse to a site near Fort Jackson, which was under construction on the site of the old Fort Toulouse.
- In preparation for the attack the colonel had frontiersman Jim Beckwourth - a former slave - rousted from his Denver home and pressed into service (on pain of death) as an involuntary scout.
- After the war, Lindsey had followed in the footsteps of frontiersman Daniel Boone and gone to Kentucky.
- For about a month I was a spare, sinewy frontiersman in fringed buckskin, with crinkly little lines about the eyes and a slow laconic drawl…
- Goldwater loved for the Eastern press to write about him as a sort of frontiersman, and generally it obliged.
- Settling with this frontiersman is not necessarily settling for; waiting for the next would not be in misty, vain hope.
- The legendary frontiersman is wandering through the prairies of Wyoming.
- But so potent was the mythical figure that travelers encountering the slight, soft-spoken frontiersman came away disappointed.
- It was a chaotic, frontiersman's existence, he said.
- As a torchbearer of American history, Cooper saw the frontiersman as a dying breed; men caught between two worlds without a home.
- The family narrative of revolutionary heroes and frontiersmen is undermined by the eventual disclosure of the family secret: their ancestral lands were purloined from the original, aboriginal owners.
- Some of the most famous frontiersmen were Lewis and Clark and their Corps of Discovery expedition.
- Another carving from the 1850s is thought to have been the work of Kit Carson, the famous frontiersman.
- The conflict between frontiersman and aboriginal, between white and black, between the ‘native’ American citizen and the ethnic immigrant are largely effaced.
- It's hard to square our usual image of Stevens as a doggedly conscientious master of surety and fidelity with this carefree frontiersman.
- He argued that the typical Australian frontiersman was not a small, individualist farmer but a shearer or drover, and that his outlook was not individualist but collectivist.
- The idea of the frontier and 'the noble frontiersman' retain a strong, if largely subliminal, purchase on the imagination of a nation now overwhelmingly urban and increasingly cosmopolitan.
- Tom Horn, legendary frontiersman, is wandering through the prairies of Wyoming.
- It was seen as the key to the defence of Texas, and among those willing to protect it were Jim Bowie - renowned knife fighter - and David Crockett, the famous English frontiersman.
- But even if every tall tale were true, neither Crockett nor any other American frontiersman before or after had as much of an impact on American history as Christopher Carson.
- Whereas the frontiersman, cowboy, and soldier protect the values of a culture, the mobster exploits freedom.
- The courage and honor, the militarism and violence of the 19th century frontiersman, soldier and cowboy remains part of the present day Texas culture, the Encyclopedia notes.
- The legendary frontiersman is seldom sober, and by the time of the siege he is too sick and delirious with typhoid to hold his eponymous knife.
- Cherokee women and European traders or frontiersman sought each other to gain access to goods or territory and to cement alliances.
- It is conceivable that some hard-working early American frontiersman might hold to such a belief, but difficult to understand how such a contention could come out of Spain, of all places.
- Both countries, after all, have a tradition of the frontiersman.
Synonyms settler, colonizer, colonial, frontierswoman, pioneer |