¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Auditories
1. auditory [n] - See also: auditory
Lexicographical Neighbors of Auditories
Literary usage of Auditories
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Church History of Britain: From the Birth of Jesus Christ Until the Year by Thomas Fuller, John Sherren Brewer (1845)
"... knew him to be too wise to take exception at such trifles, the rather because
the most judicious is always the least part in all auditories. ..."
2. A Biographical Dictionary of Eminent Scotsmen by Robert Chambers (1835)
"... chose to preach to small auditories, and would never gire notice before hand.
He had indeed a very low voice, and so could not be heard by a great crowd ..."
3. The Christian Magazine by Mendon Association (1826)
"... so muck as our own auditories. For the Christian Magazine. UNITARIANISM SOUND
DOCTRINE.— A Sermon preached at Waltham, at the Ordination of the Rev. ..."
4. The Vicars of Rochdale by Francis Robert Raines (1883)
"... a circumstance which would alone account for the crowded auditories which
flocked to his ejected predecessor. He published in London, in 1676, 4to, ..."
5. Mental discipline; or, Hints on the cultivation of intellectual & moral by Henry Forster Burder (1830)
"The diversity of mental character prevailing in the auditories we address.
It is the just remark of Dr. Campbell, in his Philosophy of Rhetoric, ..."
6. The Methodist Magazine by John Wesley (1809)
"... attended by crowded auditories ; and learning, ... will ever attract " crowded
auditories. ... auditories ..."