Similar words: jacobin, jacob, jacobean, to bite off, to bite the dust, obit, probit, probity. Meaning: ['dʒækəbaɪt] n. a supporter of James II after he was overthrown or a supporter of the Stuarts.
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1. They had taken part in a Jacobite plot against William III.
2. Boswell failed to see beyond the Gael, the Jacobite.
3. A Jacobite solution could be attractive to different people for different reasons at different times.
4. Jacobite pamphlets often reflected an awareness of the mixed nature of their support.
5. Jacobite crowds sometimes attacked poor Dissenting groups, such as the Baptists.
6. However, other Jacobite demonstrations from this time appear to have lacked much genuine support.
7. The view that Anne was a sentimental Jacobite who secretly wished her brother-in-law to succeed her has now been debunked as myth.
8. Even after two Jacobite invasions had failed the Highlands remained in a more or less permanent state of lawlessness.
9. The Orthodox and Jacobite churches have also condemned it.
10. They are flocking to ride on the Jacobite Steam Train which takes them through some of Scotland's most spectacular scenery in the heart of Harry Potter country.
11. This is the most famous characteristic of the Jacobite Rite.
12. Jacobite is a small fleet of ships that set sail from the Caledonian Canal and into the mysterious waters of Loch Ness.
13. English statesman, orator, and writer. A Jacobite , he spent much of his life in exile and wrote influential political treatises(sentencedict.com), notably The Idea of a Patriot King (1749).
14. The battle marked the end of the 1745 Jacobite Rising.
15. Some of them, such as sedition in both its Jacobite and Jacobin forms, have always interested historians.
16. On 3 October 1745 Drummond was forced to suspend payments - allegedly because he supported the Jacobite rebellion.
17. The Court at St Germain, however, was riven with personal rivalries and intrigues, which weakened Jacobite organisation considerably.
18. It is simply not possible to say that the Highlanders were all on the Jacobite side and the Lowlanders of Glasgow and Edinburgh on the side of the English.
19. Worse was to come on 21 August 1689, during the first Jacobite uprising.
20. There was nothing for it but to sit and hear Jacobite toasts and Gaeliz songs.
21. Later a refuge for Catholic priests in times of terror the Stuarts of Traquair supported Mary Queen of Scots and the Jacobite cause without counting the cost.
More similar words: jacobin, jacob, jacobean, to bite off, to bite the dust, obit, probit, probity, jackie robinson, obituary, improbity, bite, biter, bite off, arbiter, dog bite, Moabite, orbiter, overbite, backbite, sound bite, inhabited, bite the dust, frostbite, inhibited, prohibited, uninhibited, uninhabited, bit by bit, cob.