- had a cognate, dregil,
meaning "servant, runner". The
English derivation thraldom is of High
Medieval date. The verb "to enthrall" is of
Early Modern origin...
-
filled my mind. ... I
mused of
Indian freedom and
Asiatic freedom from the
thraldom of Europe." Later, in 1905, when he had
begun his
institutional schooling...
-
without free speech,
inquisitorial forces will
impose "an
undeserved thraldom upon learning". The
achievements of the 17th
century included the invention...
- prin****l
mission was to "eman****te the
British Colonies from
British Thraldom". On 16
September 1838, a
convention attended by 160
delegates of the organization...
- in his mind, a
strong resistance to that tyranny,
which held him in the
thraldom of slavery". The
Victorian era
marked the
height of the
movement which...
-
strength in the
straits of the night;
coercion (N) will lie upon them—their
thraldom to the King." See
Bradley 1982, p.154 Bradley, S.A.J, ed. and tr. 1982...
-
flight from thee by base acts, and
subject thyself once more to the devil’s
thraldom:
because thy
purchase money is the
blood of Christ,
because He
shall judge...
- they mean "checking the
outgoing powers of the mind,
freeing it from the
thraldom of the
senses ahara". This
involves withdrawal of senses, or
sensory inputs...
- the good or evil of
their wills in the beginning, they fell
under the
thraldom of the ring that they bore and of the
domination of the One
which was Sauron's...
-
comes when they will be
handed back to
Denmark liberated from the foul
thraldom into
which they have been
plunged by
German aggression. On the same day...