释义 |
Definition of freedom rider in English: freedom ridernoun US A person who challenged racial laws in the American South during in the 1960s, originally by refusing to abide by the laws governing the segregation of seating in buses. Example sentencesExamples - A week after leaving Washington, D.C., the original freedom riders were met right outside Anniston, Alabama, by a violent mob of over a hundred white people determined to stop them.
- It was fitting that one of our last stops on the ride featured the comments of Congressman Lewis, one of the original freedom riders.
- When I think of ‘the tumultuous '60s,’ I don't see peace signs and freedom riders; I see crowds: rallies and rock festivals and that epitome of way-too-crowded-for-me known as communal living.
- They're meeting some of the old freedom riders, Lewis himself was one, who integrated inter-city bus travel.
- He was jailed as a freedom rider, arrested as a war protester and, at the United Nations headquarters in New York, as a hunger striker against nuclear weapons.
- Founded in 1867, the church served as headquarters for African Americans and all freedom riders during the Civil Rights Movement.
- Thus, in 1971 the Court permitted suit against private persons who attempted to keep civil rights workers and freedom riders from entering Mississippi.
- And they're modeling their action after the freedom riders from the civil rights movement.
- With a renewed sense of faith and purpose, the freedom riders continued, escorted by national guardsmen.
- But an awful lot of people did not know that he risked both political life as well as physical life as a freedom rider.
Definition of freedom rider in US English: freedom ridernoun US A person who challenged racial laws in the American South in the 1960s, originally by refusing to abide by the laws designating that seating in buses be segregated by race. Example sentencesExamples - It was fitting that one of our last stops on the ride featured the comments of Congressman Lewis, one of the original freedom riders.
- Thus, in 1971 the Court permitted suit against private persons who attempted to keep civil rights workers and freedom riders from entering Mississippi.
- And they're modeling their action after the freedom riders from the civil rights movement.
- A week after leaving Washington, D.C., the original freedom riders were met right outside Anniston, Alabama, by a violent mob of over a hundred white people determined to stop them.
- But an awful lot of people did not know that he risked both political life as well as physical life as a freedom rider.
- When I think of ‘the tumultuous '60s,’ I don't see peace signs and freedom riders; I see crowds: rallies and rock festivals and that epitome of way-too-crowded-for-me known as communal living.
- They're meeting some of the old freedom riders, Lewis himself was one, who integrated inter-city bus travel.
- With a renewed sense of faith and purpose, the freedom riders continued, escorted by national guardsmen.
- Founded in 1867, the church served as headquarters for African Americans and all freedom riders during the Civil Rights Movement.
- He was jailed as a freedom rider, arrested as a war protester and, at the United Nations headquarters in New York, as a hunger striker against nuclear weapons.
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