She too was a suffragette for peace purposes--an aggressive fat female of decisively militant aspect.
The idea that a suffragette could have written it was ridiculous!
I was actually taken for a Suffragette in the market-place just now.
Under some pretext or another we still lingered, though there were ten of us and the space in our Suffragette shop was uncomfortably limited.
Do you mean to say he is a Suffragetteby birth, too?
I should say he was an Anti by birth; but I think he may be a Suffragette by marriage, though I doubt if he or his wife had found it out until to-night.
She is really a Suffragette by birth, and only an Anti by marriage.
At the first semblance of a pause, the Suffragette broke in again, the smile still predominating.
The Suffragette caught the remark, and determined to catch the woman who made it.
These were swiftly disposed of, being principally of the wash-tub order, already answered in her speech; and observing serenely that she concluded everybody was now converted, the Suffragette came down from her perch.
The labour troubles revived, the suffragette movement increased greatly in violence and aggressiveness, and there sprang up no less than three ecclesiastical scandals in the diocese.
The papers got hold of Eleanor's share in the suffragette disturbance.
There will be something the matter pretty soon if I have much more of that suffragette sauce.
The suffragette procession in which Miss Ingate had musically and discreetly taken part seemed to her as she stood in Mr. Moze's changeless lair to be a phantasm.
She knew that she, if any one, ought to subscribe to the Suffragette Union, and to subscribe largely.
Mr. Gilman had written to her regularly; he had sent dazzling subscriptions to the Suffragette Union; and Audrey had replied regularly.
The two kissed very heartily in the street, which was full of spring and of the posters of evening papers bearing melodramatic tidings of the latest nocturnal development of the terrible suffragette campaign.
For she was a convinced suffragette by faith, because Miss Ingate was a convinced suffragette.
She promised, smiling, for even a suffragette may like pretty hats.
When she had disappeared he returned and remarked, "I suppose you have heard of Miss Margaret Ashton, the suffragette leader, Mr. Kennedy?
The working objection to the Suffragette philosophy is simply that overmastering millions of women do not agree with it.
The solemnity of politics; the necessity of votes; the necessity of Huggins; the necessity of Buggins; all these flow in a pellucid stream from the lips of all the suffragette speakers.
The silly suffragette with her hammer and a plate-glass window has more sense of drama than you, Dodo.
Fancy waking in the morning and finding you had missed something, like an earthquake or suffragette riot!
And say, that's all I can get out of Pyramid on the subject; for when it comes to business, he's about as chatty over his plans as a hard shell clam on the suffragette question.
No suffragette need break a lance for her, demanding a ballot, dower-rights, and the rest of it.
And if the female mosquitoes do all the fine work, there is a great scarcity of male mosquitoes on Smith's portage, and once more in the North the suffragette comes into her own.
Win turned from an incipient suffragette into a temporarily venomous woman hater when a customer made her show nine dozen dolls, and then minced away saying that Peter Rolls never did have anything worth buying.
Of course," said a suffragette lecturer, "I admit that women are vain and men are not.
BILL--"Jake said he was going to break up the suffragette meeting the other night.
I'd hate t' be married t' a suffragette an' have t' eat Battle Creek breakfasts.
What sort of a ticket does your suffragette club favor?
One Suffragette wrote that an apology was due,--yes, J.
In manners she was precisely like what the Suffragette was at that time expected to be, pushing her way through the crowd, and vociferating 'Shyme!
With full programme of Great Suffragette Meeting in 'Yde Park!
It must be confessed she had felt quite as strongly as her sister that it wouldn't do to be recognized at a Suffragette meeting.
CURIE, Madame, one of the few women who got her name in print without being a suffragette or an actress.
The army later became a suffragette institution when women were admitted as recruits, and placed as sentries to guard the Christmas-Easter collection forts.
Cicily did not hesitate to remove all ambiguity from the utterance of the militant suffragette with the sallow, narrow face.
Before Mrs. Carrington could formulate a reply to this pertinent interrogation, the militant suffragette from England began an oration.
The militant suffragette was on her feet before the presiding officer had finished speaking.
When this had been accomplished, the militant suffragette at once stood up, and spoke with the aggressive energy that marked her every act.
I suppose this is parliamentary law as it is understood in America," the militant suffragette made sarcastic comment, in a shrill voice.
I move that we adjourn," the militant suffragette repeated in a most businesslike manner.
Now, when the speech came to a close, that militant suffragette again addressed the chair.
This was Mrs. Flynn, a visiting militant suffragette from England.
He couldn't get us into the Ladies' Gallery because of the silly rule about only wives and sisters or near relations made since the suffragette fusses, but he showed us all about and it was simply fascinating.
I read of an English suffragette trying to address a meeting and pelted with tomatoes by a crowd grown weary of suffragette outrages.
One sees the whole-hearted enthusiasm of both the suffragette and the dancer.
Not quite a wise thing to say to a journalist, but it is in effect what the suffragette also says, and is rewarded with rotten tomatoes as her sister with a procès-verbal.
For she was a Suffragette, so far as it is possible to be a Suffragette effectively when one is just seventeen, and she spent much of her time composing speeches which she knew she would always be too shy to deliver.
The American dowager is sorry that tobacco was ever introduced; and the American suffragette and social reformer is considering whether tobacco ought not to be abolished.
I know few women in England, from the most revolutionary Suffragette to the most carefully preserved Early Victorian, who will not confess to having passed a happy childhood with the Little Women of Miss Alcott.
At all these meetings the prospect of Suffragette interruptions weighed upon her like a nightmare.
It was on the occasion of Campbell-Bannerman's great meeting at the Albert Hall, before the election, that the portent of the Suffragette first manifested itself in the form of a young woman who put inconvenient questions to "C.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "suffragette" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: franchise; suffrage; vote