122 adjectives to describe era

In this great revolutionary era, the authority of the past and even the respect naturally due to parents is very generally disregarded.

Great artists had previously made themselves famous, like Miron, Polycletus, and Ageladas; but the great riches which flowed into Athens at this time gave a peculiar stimulus to art, especially under the encouragement of such a ruler as Pericles, whose age was the golden era of Grecian history.

It will be as impossible to put back British industrialism into the factories and forms of the pre-war era as it would be to restore the Carthaginian Empire.

In a spacious chamber beneath the eaves, hideously papered and furnished with cheerless, massive relics of the early Victorian era, the man Nogam pursued methodical preparations for bed.

BOWERS, CLAUDE G. Beveridge and the progressive era

It was thus passing through one of the remote eras of its existence.

The formative era of American law.

Hence, perhaps, its popularity since the first conflicts of the Protestant Reformation, and especially since the great French Revolution, when amid new inventions and new ideas mankind has contemplatively looked for the coming events, the new historical eras, which were casting their shadows before.

Gang rule in New York, the story of a lawless era.

He would have stood out as the great historic figure of a glorious era in the national annals.

Should Heaven take him, it would be the dawn of a better era for Russia.

MARDER, ARTHUR J. The anatomy of British sea power; a history of British naval policy in the pre-Dreadnought era, 1880-1905.

Como era de esperar, entre los oficiales que, según tenían de costumbre, acudieron al día siguiente á tomar el sol

Little Era in old Russia, by Irina Skariatina; with illus.

The Adventures of Mr. Verdant Green Edward Bradley is one of few English humorists of the mid-Victorian era who produced any work that is likely to survive the wear of time and change of taste.

Besides, the dissolution of the Oxford parliament with that memorable speech, was a remarkable era in the contention of the factions, after which the Whigs gradually declined, both in spirit, in power, and in popularity.

The incredible era.

In Helena, I could not make use of any man as the representative of the modern poetic era except him, who is undoubtedly the greatest genius of our century."

Tribune:"The pictures of old time teams players and magnates of a bygone era will interest every lover of the game, and no doubt start many discussions and recollections among the old timers.

While the equator, and even the tropics of Cancer and of Capricorn, were still too boiling hot to support life, up here in the Arctic regions there was a carboniferous era goin' on" "Where's the coal, then?" sneered Potts.

Probably, without antedating in time these historical records of Asia, they reach back to a more primitive and barbarous era.

[geological eras (list, starting at given number of years bp)]

There are signs that a literary era is commencing, in which the drama will again regain to the full its position as a literature.

As the mechanical era diminished the element of physical exertion in work, we would have supposed that man would have sought expression for his physical faculties in other ways.

It is generally believed that this particular branch of poultry was found in the town above mentioned as long ago as the Roman era.

122 adjectives to describe  era