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9 Sentences With "more plebeian"

How to use more plebeian in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "more plebeian" and check conjugation/comparative form for "more plebeian". Mastering all the usages of "more plebeian" from sentence examples published by news publications.

This seems especially true in Australia when it comes to our more plebeian offerings.
In the meantime, Mr. VandeHei, one of the founders of Politico, is keeping himself occupied with a more plebeian venture: a Snapchat channel.
Since we wore jeans and gym clothes during the week, and cars on campus were prohibited until the second semester of senior year, there were few ways to tell the difference between those who were second- or third-generation attendees and others from more plebeian backgrounds.
Though catalogs are available to help those with limited Italian, the professional staff is also eager to offer assistance, bringing up from the basement on a stock elevator classic offerings from manufacturers like Pelikan and Graf von Faber-Castell or the more plebeian Lamy we'd come to find.
We learn the cultural significance of attending the German synagogue ("so severe and contrasting in its almost Lutheran gathering of prosperous, burgherly Homburg hats") versus the Italian synagogue ("more working-class and theatrical, almost Catholic") or of vacationing at the bourgeois seaside resort of Riccione versus the more plebeian Gatteo.
Rather than joining the middle-class Rechabite temperance association to which his Uncle Tristram belonged, Gilman became a member of the more plebeian Washingtonians.
During the Civil War, many Catholic women were less willing to join Sección Femenina because it was less aristocratic. They also viewed them as more plebeian. This made them more hesitant to join them. As a result, these more middle-class women joined the Margaritas, where they had strong organizational skills, loyalty and a willingness to take on dangerous tasks in support of their beliefs and their hometowns.
People commonly referred to Ōshinbun as "political forums" because these papers were inextricably tied to the Popular Rights Movement (自由民権運動, "Jiyū minken undō") and its demands for establishing a Diet. After the government's official announcement of the formation of the Diet, these newspapers, such as the Yokohama Mainichi Shinbun and the Chūgai shinbun, became organs of the political parties. The early readers of these newspapers mostly came from the ranks of the former samurai class. Koshinbun, on the other hand, were more plebeian, popular newspapers that contained local news, human interest stories, and light fiction.
During the Late Republic, the spelling Clodius is most prominently associated with Publius Clodius Pulcher, a popularis politician who gave up his patrician status through an order in order to qualify for the office of tribune of the plebs. Clodius positioned himself as a champion of the urban plebs, supporting free grain for the poor and the right of association in guilds (collegia); because of this individual's ideology, Clodius has often been taken as a more "plebeian" spelling and a gesture of political solidarity. Clodius's two elder brothers, the Appius Claudius Pulcher who was consul in 54 BC and the C. Claudius Pulcher who was praetor in 56 BC, conducted more conventional political careers and are referred to in contemporary sources with the traditional spelling. The view that Clodius represents a plebeian or politicized form has been questioned by Clodius's chief modern-era biographer.

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