How To Use Mossback In A Sentence

  • A: because mossback is a traitorous cancervatard who would rather see the country fail than a democrat succed. Think Progress » San Francisco Commonwealth Club postpones O’Keefe event.
  • Call me a mossback but I still believe in supply and demand. The Fear Factor, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • It won't really appease either the die-hard mossbacks or the fanatic up-to-the-minutes.
  • The mossback is the man who tries to use the old methods under the new conditions; he is not "up" with the present times, but "back" with the old times. Chapters in Rural Progress
  • But if we look for the reasons for his fall only in the sins of the mossbacks in Washington, we will miss an important part of the lesson of all of this.
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • Indeed the boys so loved this work and were so proud of their skill, that when an unusually vicious old "mossback" was encountered, each strove to be the first catch and master him. The Red-Blooded Heroes of the Frontier
  • The mossback is the man who has either misread the signs of the times, or who has not possessed the speed demanded in the two-minute class. Chapters in Rural Progress
  • Q: why does mossback insist on giving “aid and comfort” to “the enemy” by not wanting them to be tried for their crimes? Think Progress » San Francisco Commonwealth Club postpones O’Keefe event.
  • He was followed to the very verge of the wood, and then the exhausted "mossback" left him to return to the house. A Tramp's Notebook
  • I thought that I was a ‘mossback’, but the LA Weekly's Doug Harvey has now convinced me that I am a crackpot!
  • District, Province of British Columbia, there lived a "mossback" who was as happy as the 22nd day of June is long in each year. Skookum Chuck Fables Bits of History, Through the Microscope
  • Meanwhile, the Bush family's Supreme Court appointees -- along with that mossback relic of the Reagan era, Antonin Scalia -- habitually thumb their noses at the very notion of an independent and impartial judiciary. Michael Winship: The Bush Legacy Strikes Out American Justice
  • mossback," or a "garrulous dotard," and with singular irreverence they took delight in twitting him upon his senility and in pestering him with divers new-fangled notions altogether distasteful, not to say shocking, to a gentleman of his years. The Holy Cross and Other Tales

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy