Matty Prudence thought he had won it until Kevin Leggett scored a late leveller.
From the edp24.co.uk
Even in the 19th century the flower show was considered a great social leveller.
From the express.co.uk
It can be frightening to contemplate sometimes, but often it's a real leveller.
From the blogs.psychcentral.com
He understands, too, how a place like this, run properly, can be a great leveller.
From the telegraph.co.uk
Leveller heads might point to the Great Depression as a more plausible explanation.
From the guardian.co.uk
Cutting people down gets a lot of bad press, but I think it's quite a good leveller.
From the independent.co.uk
They then forced a leveller just before half-time, when Siddell scored from open play.
From the kidderminstershuttle.co.uk
The fact that every setting has to do the EYFS by law was a great leveller.
From the guardian.co.uk
What other food is so meet and fitting in that other great leveller, the British pub?
From the guardian.co.uk
More examples
Leveler: a radical who advocates the abolition of social distinctions
The Leveller was a British political magazine, c.1976 to 1982, collectively produced by a shifting coalition of radicals, socialists, marxists, feminists, and others of the British left and progressive movements. ...
The Levellers was a political movement during the English Civil Wars which emphasised popular sovereignty, extended suffrage, equality before the law, and religious tolerance, all of which were expressed in the manifesto "Agreement of the People". ...
(Levellers (album)) This untitled/eponymous album was the third full-length release by Brighton-based folk punk band The Levellers. The record charted at number two in the British album charts and contained the singles "Belaruse", "This Garden" and "Julie".
(The Levellers (band)) The Levellers are an English rock band influenced by punk and traditional English music. The band is based in Brighton, England where it was founded in 1988. ...
A person or thing that levels; A person holding a political opinion in favor of eliminating disparities between the haves and the have nots; An equaliser
(Levellers) A movement that started in the New Model Army and gained supporters in the general population when they expressed what they understood to be the purposes of the war. (They resisted the label "Leveller," but it's hard to know what else to call them. ...
(Levellers) a radical democratic movement of the English revolution, led by John Lillburne; not present in Parliament, its programme, the Agreement of the People (1647), advocated a democratic republic; it stood for economic measures on behalf of small farmers and craftsmen (see Diggers).
Name applied to supporters of John Lilburne, William Walwyn, Richard Overton et al, called after the early rioters against enclosure who 'levelled' fences erected by landlords around former common lands. ...