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Oberlin

[ French aw-ber-lan ]

noun

  1. Jean Fré·dé·ric [zhah, n, f, r, ey-dey-, reek], 1740–1826, Alsatian clergyman.


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Example Sentences

"My Name is Jonas" was inspired by a car accident that his brother got into at Oberlin—and the insurance hassles that followed.

Oberlin College codified the trigger warning into its teacher guide, telling professors to “avoid” triggers in their classrooms.

Shielding students from the cissexism of the Western canon was too silly even for Oberlin.

Because of that Oberlin was dubbed “the town that started the Civil War.”

The Stuyvesant High School for Shy Nerds, The Oberlin Academy for Self-Expression, and Huntah College for Everybody.

This gentleman is a surgeon-dentist by profession, educated at Oberlin College, making his home in Columbus.

When twenty-one, he entered Oberlin College, remaining there five years, and earning all the money he spent.

In 1832, Oberlin was a little religious colony, born into a complete wilderness out of the Presbyterian Church.

Pupils and teachers who had gone from Oberlin to Vassar both missed the pleasant excitement of the old life.

Everybody at Oberlin was loud in its praise; no one would teach now in any other sort of college.

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