Harriet Beecher Stowe is a famous American abolitionist. The word abolitionist is a noun. Synonyms for this word are advocate, activist, and revolutionary.
Thomas Jefferson was originally an abolitionist.
No, the word 'abolitionist' is not a pronoun. The word abolitionist is a noun, a word for a person.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronouns that take the place of the noun abolitionist are he or she as a subject; him or heras an object.
you just did, and you can.....ex. he was an ab abolitionist
Before the Civil War people who were against Slavery were called abolitionists. An abolitionist is someone who believes slavery should be abolished.
An abolitionist was a person who worked to abolish slavery in the United States. So in a sentence: Abraham Lincoln was an abolitionist.
During the 1800's, an abolitionist was considered someone who was for the immediate removal of slavery across the entire U.S. and was willing to resort to any means to get it, including violence.
John believed that the U.S. should rid the country of slavery immediately, thus he was called an abolisionist.
Harriet Tubman made 19 trips to the south and led over 300 slaves to freedom
The great John Brown, as a revolutionary abolitionist, was against slavery to the point of advocating and practicing armed insurrection as a means to abolish it. John Brown (May 9, 1800 -- December 2, 1859) was a revolutionary abolitionist in the United States, who in the 1850s advocated and practiced armed insurrection as a means to abolish slavery. (Wikipedia)
Abolitionist were the people who were against slavery.
A abolitionist is a peson that is against slavery.
He was a reformer not a abolitionist