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tubman
1[tuhb-muhn]
noun
plural
tubmena barrister in the Court of Exchequer who had precedence in motions over every other barrister except the postman.
Tubman
2[tuhb-muhn]
noun
Harriet Araminta, 1820?–1913, U.S. abolitionist: escaped slavery to become a leader of the Underground Railroad; served as a Union scout during Civil War.
William Vacanarat Shadrach 1895–1971, president of Liberia 1944–71.
Tubman
/ ˈtʌbmən /
noun
William Vacanarat Shadrach (vəˈkænəˌræt ˈʃædræk). 1895–1971, Liberian statesman; president of Liberia (1944–71)
Example Sentences
The United States National Park Service began scrubbing its exhibits about Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad, but public pressure reversed that erasure.
Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass became two spokespeople for those who had lived as slaves.
Post-Civil War, you discuss how there were certainly what we would call today kind of “intersectional” feminists, like Lucy Parsons, Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman.
At least five other volunteers had joined them, including members from the Harriet Tubman Center for Social Justice and Association of Raza Educators.
"This moment is just a continuation of what Harriet Tubman did. It's a continuation of Isabella Bomfree, which is Sojourner Truth," said Spigner, the founder of A Taste of Soul NY African American Heritage tours.
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