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mastership

[ UK /mˈɑːstəʃˌɪp/ ]
NOUN
  1. the position of master
  2. the skill of a master

How To Use mastership In A Sentence

  • The artist's success was at least to a part a result of a superior mastership of the technical process of printmaking.
  • Love, Women, and War" Redbeard opines that women "are incapable of self-mastership ... mere babies in worldly concerns. Essays
  • He holds that women must be kept in subjection, writing: "Woe unto the Race if ever these loveable creatures should break loose from mastership, and become the rulers or equals of Man. Essays
  • But it proved that Mr. Bert Tybee, the former bartender, desired the postmastership. Main Street
  • During the postmastership of Mr. Blood, and since that time, the office has been kept at the only store in the place. The Bay State Monthly — Volume 1, No. 2, February, 1884
  • He holds that women must be kept in subjection, writing: "Woe unto the Race if ever these loveable creatures should break loose from mastership, and become the rulers or equals of Man. Essays
  • The postmastership had given him ample opportunity to work on his poems, however, and afterward Stone subsidized the private printing of a collection of them, his first published work, called The Marble Faun. The Private World of William Faulkner
  • But who is else -- saving his gracious mastership and our Lady her mistresshood -- in good sooth I wis not. The White Rose of Langley A Story of the Olden Time
  • Shakespeare's dramas ” not all of them indeed, but those which were written after he reached what may be called his mastership ” are in the highest sense of term Works of Art, and as such embody to the full the principles set forth in the preceding section. Shakespeare His Life Art And Characters
  • A crowd quickly gathers around him and congratulates him on his mastership of water.
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