368 examples of exoduses in sentences

"Exoduses" have been before; Kansas still remembers the exodus from Tennessee of forty years ago; but this latest exodus had no one starting-point nor any single destination.

The whites thought also to stop the exodus by inducing the steamboat lines not to furnish the emigrants' transportation.

Douglass believed, moreover, that this exodus did not conform to the "laws of civilizing migration," as the carrying of a language, literature and the like of a superior race to an inferior; and it did not conform to the geographic laws assuring healthy migration from east to west in the same latitude, as this was from south to north, far away from the climate in which the migrants were born.

For these reasons there has been since the exodus to the West a steady migration of Negroes from the South to points in the North.

Professor William O. Scroggs, of Louisiana State University, considers as causes of this exodus "the relatively low wages paid farm labor, an unsatisfactory tenant or crop-sharing system, the boll weevil, the crop failure of 1916, lynching, disfranchisement, segregation, poor schools, and the monotony, isolation and drudgery of farm life."

I say unto you, not less than thirty shekels, which is the valuation of a servant, as declared in Exodus xxi.

27-30, houses; in Exodus xxii.

"Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's house, thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's WIFE, nor his man servant, nor his maid-servant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor any thing that is thy neighbor's" EXODUS xx. 17.

[Footnote A: The Egyptians evidently had domestic servants living in their families; these may have been slaves; allusion is made to them in Exodus ix.

See "Exodus of the Israelites out of Egypt," an able article by Professor Robinson, in the Biblical Repository for October, 1832.] (3.)

Also Exodus xviii.

Exodus xxi. 20, 21.

19-22; Exodus, xxi. 18, 19, are a few, out of many cases stated, with tests furnished by which to detect the intent, in actions brought before them.

A single remark on the word "punished:" in Exodus xxi. 20, 21, the Hebrew word here rendered punished, (Nakum,) is not so rendered in another instance.

" Exodus xxxiv. 9"Pardon

In Exodus, c. xxiv.

There had been no general exodus from New York, as it was not believed possible that the enemy's missiles could reach the city proper.

This was probably an exaggeration for even the greatest year of the exodus.

"Exodus, xxv, 31.

"Exodus, xxi, 26. OBS.

"Exodus, xxi, 28.

"Exodus, ii, 6.

"Exodus, xxxiv, 1; and Deut., x, 1.

They were unloading harvests from entire provinces, unending herds of oxen and horses, tons upon tons of steel, prepared for deadly work, and human crowds lacking only a tail of women and children to be like the great martial exoduses of history.

There lacked only the soldierly women, the swarms of children, to complete exactly the resemblance to the martial exoduses of the past.

368 examples of  exoduses  in sentences