Conquerors can be categorized as a noun.
Noun |
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conqueror - someone who is victorious by force of arms |
# | Sentence | ||
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1. | noun | Spanish, Portuguese and other foreign conquerors massacred South America's Indian inhabitants at an average rate of roughly one every 10 minutes. | |
2. | noun | Why have so many individuals throughout history wished to be conquerors? | |
3. | noun | Greece, conquered, took captive her savage conqueror. | |
4. | noun | Alexander was a great conqueror. | |
5. | noun | Make me a conqueror of all nations; let the famous chariot carry me all the way from the sun to Thebes in triumph: I will consider myself human even when I am hailed everywhere as a god. | |
6. | noun | Once upon a time there lived an emperor who was a great conqueror, and reigned over more countries than anyone in the world. | |
7. | noun | Though a man may go out to battle a thousand times against a thousand men, if he conquers himself, he is the greatest conqueror. | |
8. | noun | Why would I want to be a conqueror? | |
9. | noun | Greece, once conquered, in turn conquered its uncivilized conqueror, and brought the arts to rustic Latium. | |
10. | noun | "Nor in my madness kept my purpose low, / but vowed, if e'er should happier chance invite, / and bring me home a conqueror, even so / my comrade's death with vengeance to requite. / My words aroused his wrath; thence evil's earliest blight. / Thenceforth Ulysses sought with slanderous tongue / to daunt me, scattering in the people's ear / dark hints, and looked for partners of his wrong; / nor rested, till with Calchas' aid, the seer..." | |
11. | noun | But when our fortune and our hopes declined, / the treacherous King the conqueror's cause professed, / and, false to faith, to friendship and to kind, / slew Polydorus, and his wealth possessed. / Curst greed of gold, what crimes thy tyrant power attest! | |
12. | noun | Then with lowly downcast eye / she dropped her voice, and softly made reply. / "Ah! happy maid of Priam, doomed instead / at Troy upon a foeman's tomb to die! / Not drawn by lot for servitude, nor led / a captive thrall, like me, to grace a conqueror's bed." | |
13. | noun | The Visigoth race, conqueror of the Spains, had subjugated the entire Peninsula for over a century. | |
14. | noun | Since that time the distinction between the two races, the conqueror or Gothic and the Roman or conquered, had almost disappeared, and the men of the north had become confounded with those of midday in a single nation, to whose grandiosity had contributed that with the rough virtues of savage Germania, this with the traditions of Roman culture and polity. | |
15. | noun | Greece, conquered, took captive her savage conqueror. |
Sentence | |
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noun | |
Spanish, Portuguese and other foreign conquerors massacred South America's Indian inhabitants at an average rate of roughly one every 10 minutes. | |
Why have so many individuals throughout history wished to be conquerors? | |
Greece, conquered, took captive her savage conqueror. | |
Alexander was a great conqueror. | |
Make me a conqueror of all nations; let the famous chariot carry me all the way from the sun to Thebes in triumph: I will consider myself human even when I am hailed everywhere as a god. | |
Once upon a time there lived an emperor who was a great conqueror, and reigned over more countries than anyone in the world. | |
Though a man may go out to battle a thousand times against a thousand men, if he conquers himself, he is the greatest conqueror. | |
Why would I want to be a conqueror? | |
Greece, once conquered, in turn conquered its uncivilized conqueror, and brought the arts to rustic Latium. | |
"Nor in my madness kept my purpose low, / but vowed, if e'er should happier chance invite, / and bring me home a conqueror, even so / my comrade's death with vengeance to requite. / My words aroused his wrath; thence evil's earliest blight. / Thenceforth Ulysses sought with slanderous tongue / to daunt me, scattering in the people's ear / dark hints, and looked for partners of his wrong; / nor rested, till with Calchas' aid, the seer..." | |
But when our fortune and our hopes declined, / the treacherous King the conqueror's cause professed, / and, false to faith, to friendship and to kind, / slew Polydorus, and his wealth possessed. / Curst greed of gold, what crimes thy tyrant power attest! | |
Then with lowly downcast eye / she dropped her voice, and softly made reply. / "Ah! happy maid of Priam, doomed instead / at Troy upon a foeman's tomb to die! / Not drawn by lot for servitude, nor led / a captive thrall, like me, to grace a conqueror's bed." | |
The Visigoth race, conqueror of the Spains, had subjugated the entire Peninsula for over a century. | |
Since that time the distinction between the two races, the conqueror or Gothic and the Roman or conquered, had almost disappeared, and the men of the north had become confounded with those of midday in a single nation, to whose grandiosity had contributed that with the rough virtues of savage Germania, this with the traditions of Roman culture and polity. | |
Greece, conquered, took captive her savage conqueror. |