51Թ

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blockade-runner

[ blo-keyd-ruhn-er ]

noun

  1. a ship or person that passes through a blockade.


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Other 51Թ Forms

  • dz·-ܲnԲ noun
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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of blockade-runner1

First recorded in 1860–65
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Not long after he got the top of his head shot off in the Battle of Chickamauga, Cudn Vanna married an Englishman, a blockade-runner for the Confederates.

From

During the Civil War, as Atlanta smoldered, Root’s father had smuggled him to Liverpool, England, aboard a Confederate blockade-runner.

From

This projectile was dubbed ‘the Devil’ by those on board, who were by no means anxious to hear its voice, for the lightly-built blockade-runner trembled in every knee at each discharge.

From

In 1862 he retired from the navy with the rank of post-captain; but his love of adventure led him, during the American Civil War, to take the command of a blockade-runner.

From

He had graduated from the Naval Academy in 1863, and, by an act of daring gallantry in cutting out a blockade-runner, had easily won a lieutenant's commission.

From

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