Get Free Checker

nationhood

[ UK /nˈe‍ɪʃənhˌʊd/ ]
[ US /ˈneɪʃənˌhʊd/ ]
NOUN
  1. the state of being a nation

How To Use nationhood In A Sentence

  • No institution has done more to build a sense of Scottish culture, identity and nationhood over the past generation.
  • These settlements provide the opportunity for Maori New Zealanders to move forward with all others in the spirit of shared nationhood.
  • The party believes that Indian nationhood stems from a deep cultural bonding of the people which overrides differences of caste, region, religion and language.
  • Yet nationhood is such a prickly issue, it overwhelms even great tragedy.
  • It means disorganization, destruction, obliteration, of the institutions of government and nationhood.
  • In the first, the oneness of nationhood is authoritarian - centralized, homogenous, dominated by a single individual, a single party, a single ethnicity.
  • John Winthrop (governor of Massachusetts Bay) transferred the idea of "nationhood" in biblical Israel to the Massachusetts Bay Company. Frank Schaeffer: "Christian-Zionism" Is Trouble for Israel and the USA
  • In the capital, people celebrated their impending nationhood after decades of struggle and strife.
  • This school concedes that the Tamils the world over are by the standard definition of the term entitled to nationhood, but their land space for exercising that claim is Tamilnadu - not Sri Lanka. Kottu
  • Megalithic temples that predate the Egyptian pyramids, Bronze Age archaeological sites, Phoenician inscriptions, and Roman catacombs all contribute to a sense of nationhood.
View all