Used in a Sentence

anglo-american

Definitions, parts of speech, synonyms, and sentence examples for anglo-american.

Editorial note

The Guardian is Fox News for Anglo-American progressives (or at least a certain set of them).

Examples16
Definitions3
Parts of speech2

Quick take

The English language as used in Britain and North America.

Meaning at a glance

The clearest senses and uses of anglo-american gathered in one view.

noun

The English language as used in Britain and North America.

noun

An English-American; an American of English heritage.

adjective

Of, belonging to, or involving both England (or Britain), and the United States or Canada.

Definitions

Core meanings and parts of speech for anglo-american.

noun

The English language as used in Britain and North America.

noun

An English-American; an American of English heritage.

adjective

Of, belonging to, or involving both England (or Britain), and the United States or Canada.

Example sentences

1

The Guardian is Fox News for Anglo-American progressives (or at least a certain set of them).

2

Churchill tried to get the Anglo-American army that was getting ready to invade Italy to attack Greece instead.

3

In Anglo-American legal tradition, an explicit enumeration of included elements is an implicit exclusion of anything else.

4

Historically, one of the core features of liberalism, especially Anglo-American liberal democracy, has been a tolerance of divergent opinions.

5

Not in Anglo-American copyright law, but it is a part of the civil law (i.e continental) equivalent.

6

One fundamental difference between German and Anglo-American law is the prosecuter's task, as mandated by law.

7

The historical bent of the Anglo-American legal system is that courts have very expansive powers to facilitate the collection of evidence.

8

Sure the average Anglo-American listener has a lot more options, but if you want to learn about other cultures, you are toast.

9

The credit bubbles happen for a very specific reason - a bug in the Anglo-American tradition of banking in which banks do not match their maturities.

10

> One of the core features of liberalism, especially Anglo-American liberal democracy, has been a tolerance of divergent opinions.

11

Anglo-American law takes no explicit position on this...

12

On the whole, freedom of contract (a characteristic feature of Anglo-American law since that body of law was located only in England) is a feature rather than a bug.

Quote examples

1

Then may I suggest Carroll Quigley's works relative to the Rhodes groups, in particular "The Anglo-American Establishment: From Rhodes to Cliveden" and "Tragedy and Hope".

2

That perception is probably strengthened by the fact that the high-profile "pro-gamergate" articles have come from right-wing Anglo-American media outlets like Breitbart Media, whose politics start from a position that's pretty weird/foreign by local standards.

3

[1] Rhetoric aside, the tradition of Anglo-American law is that "rights" only bind the actions of the government to the extent that they are recognized by the social compacts that bind the nation together.

4

Just so everyone is clear here, while Derrida had an "uncertain" reception in some parts of the academy (those crusty old anglo-American philosophers), he was deeply influential, and by some peoples' accounts, one of the most influential philosophers of the 20th century.

Frequently asked questions

Short answers drawn from the clearest meanings and examples for this word.

How do you use anglo-american in a sentence?

The Guardian is Fox News for Anglo-American progressives (or at least a certain set of them).

What does anglo-american mean?

The English language as used in Britain and North America.

What part of speech is anglo-american?

anglo-american is commonly used as noun, adjective.