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Showing results for sixth column. Search instead for st.+colum.

sixth column

American  

noun

  1. the persons residing in a country at war who are devoted to aiding the fifth column in its activities, especially by lowering morale, spreading rumors, etc.

  2. the persons residing in a country at war who are devoted to blocking the efforts of the fifth column.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“I was almost the sixth column that day,” he said, before approaching the bouquets that lined the floor.

From Washington Post • Jun. 28, 2021

Starting it on the sixth column was a very odd decision for the Times’ constructor to make—and yet this odd decision was replicated in Parker’s version.

From Slate • Mar. 10, 2016

Phrase-fancier Franklin Roosevelt had picked up a new one: sixth column.

From Time Magazine Archive

Marshall Field's tabloid Chicago Sun-Times has begun to stay in the black by adding a sixth column to its five-column page, thus crowding more news into less paper.

From Time Magazine Archive

This percentage should be figured every day, and every week and every month, and is arrived at by dividing the figures in the eighth column by the figures in the sixth column.

From The Automobile Storage Battery Its Care And Repair by Witte, Otto A.