Colonist example sentences

Related (13): settler, migrant, immigrant, pioneer, frontier, inhabitant, citizen, expatriate, outlander, newcomer, transplant, refugee, émigré

"Colonist" Example Sentences


1. The early colonists arrived in the New World seeking religious freedom and economic opportunity.
2. The Pilgrims were English colonists who established the Plymouth colony in present-day Massachusetts.
3. The first English colonists in Jamestown relied on assistance from the local Powhatan tribe.
4. Many of the early colonists died from disease and starvation during the first years in the New World.
5. The colonists struggled to adapt to the unfamiliar climate, terrain and resources of America.
6. Religious dissenters comprised many of the early English colonists in America.
7. European colonists brought diseases that ravaged Native American populations.
8. Conflicts often arose between colonists and native peoples over land and resources.
9. Colonists began establishing permanent settlements and farming the land across the Eastern seaboard.
10. The colonies grew through high birth rates among colonists and waves of European immigrants.
11. As European powers established colonies, colonists forcibly displaced native peoples.
12. French colonists settled along the northern Eastern seaboard and in the Mississippi River Valley.
13. Dutch and Swedish colonists also established short-lived colonies in North America.
14. The first Spanish colonists in North America settled in present-day Florida and the Southwestern U.S.
15. Many African people arrived in the colonies involuntarily as enslaved laborers for colonists.
16. Networks of trade developed between colonists, native peoples, and other European colonies.
17. Relations between colonists and indigenous groups ranged from conflict to cooperation and alliance.
18. Colonists imported European crops, livestock and innovation to establish agricultural economies.
19. Space constraints in the colonies led colonists to adopt new farming techniques.
20. Frontier colonists encountered harsh conditions and conflicts with indigenous peoples.
21. Colonial legal systems were developed by and for colonists in newly claimed territories.
22. Colonial governments favored the interests of colonists in policies toward native groups.
23. Australian colonists displaced Aboriginal peoples as they established colonies in the late 1700s.
24. Early Israeli colonists sought to reclaim historic lands for a Jewish homeland.

25. South African colonists diminished the lands and autonomy of indigenous peoples.
26. Industrialization and technological innovation supported growth in the colonial powers and colonies.
27. Colonists often brought elements of their original cultures with them to colonies.
28. Colonists created blended cultures that incorporated aspects of native and African cultures.
29. Difficulties establishing self-sufficient economies plagued early colonial settlements.
30. Colonies relied on trade with the mother country for survival in their early years.
31. The English colonial system gave colonists considerable autonomy from parliamentary control.
32. Frictions developed between the English colonial system and the autonomy of colonists.
33. Tensions between colonists and the mother country contributed to revolutionary movements.
34. Imperial reforms attempted to exert more control over autonomous colonial governments.
35. The colonial system relied on cheap labor from enslaved and indentured peoples.
36. A growing colonial population and export economy strained Imperial control from across the Atlantic.
37. Colonial systems and mentalities of dominance still shape governance in formerly colonized nations.
38. Postcolonial theories examine the legacies of colonialism for indigenous and colonized peoples.
39. Decolonization movements sought to overturn systems of dominance established by colonists.
40. National consciousness emerged among colonists before and during the fight for independence.
41. Patriotic myths formed around colonists' fights to become self-governing nations.
42. Modern nation-states have roots in the colonies established by European powers.
43. Colonization disrupted and often destroyed indigenous peoples' relationships to their environments.
44. Colonized land became property to be owned, exploited and developed by colonists.
45. Indigenous knowledge, practices and innovations were often dismissed by colonists.
46. Colonization led to loss of land, autonomy and culture for colonized peoples.
47. Colonization was justified through ideologies of colonial power and racial superiority.
48. Colonists imposed Christian religious beliefs on indigenous belief systems.
49. Colonization contributed to global networks of trade, culture and governance.
50. Decolonization movements aimed to overturn colonial legacies of exploitation and marginalization.
51. Independence movements sought self-determination after years of colonial dominance.
52. Postcolonial nations still face challenges of uneven development and inequality.
53. Postcolonial theorists critique the dominance of Western thought that originated in colonial systems.
54. Colonization disrupted traditional governance structures of indigenous peoples.
55. Colonists spread Enlightenment ideals of rationality, progress and individual rights.
56. Indigenous resistance movements opposed colonists' exploitation of lands and peoples.
57. Colonization brought environmental change through resource exploitation and land transformation.
58. Colonial powers divided and reshaped the lands of colonized peoples.
59. Colonists established racial hierarchies that categorized indigenous peoples as inferior.
60. Colonial and postcolonial legacies persist in global inequalities between the 'developing' and 'developed' world.

Common Phases


1. English colonists settled in North America.
2. French colonists settled in North America.
3. Early colonists faced many hardships.
4. Colonists clashed with Native Americans.
5. Colonists relied on Native Americans.
6. Colonists introduced European farming techniques.
7. Colonists established permanent settlements.
8. Colonists displaced Native Americans.
9. Colonists imported European crops and livestock.
10. Colonial powers established colonies.
11. Colonial authorities governed the colonies.
12. Colonists traded with other colonies.
13. Tensions arose between colonies and colonial powers.
14. Colonists sought independence from colonial powers.
15. Colonists fought for independence.

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