¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Personated
1. personate [v] - See also: personate
Lexicographical Neighbors of Personated
Literary usage of Personated
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Leviathan ; Or, The Matter, Forme & Power of a Commonwealth, Ecclesiasticall by Thomas Hobbes, Alfred Rayney Waller (1904)
"Of PERSONS, AUTHORS, and things Personated. A PERSON, is he, whose words or
actions are considered, either as his own, or as representing the words or ..."
2. The True Intellectual System of the Universe: Wherein All the Reason and by Ralph Cudworth, Thomas Birch (1837)
"... personated and deified, and that those gods were not animal, nor indeed
philosophical, but fictitious, and nothing but the things of nature allegorized. ..."
3. Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure by William Mack, Howard Pervear Nash (1903)
"450), or where he delivered it to a third party who fraudulently personated the
payee that was named and intended ( Levy ». Bank of America, 24 La. ..."
4. The Judicial Dictionary, of Words and Phrases Judicially Interpreted, to by Frederick Stroud (1903)
"(с) To sign a document in the name of a person personated by .the person who
signs it, or in a fictitious name, provided that the effect of the instrument ..."
5. The English Works of Thomas Hobbes of Malmesbury by Thomas ( Hobbes (1839)
"OF PERSONS, AUTHORS, AND THINGS Personated. A PERSON, is he, whose words or
actions are con- A person what. sidered, either as his own, or as representing ..."
6. The Quarterly Review by William Gifford, George Walter Prothero, John Gibson Lockhart, John Murray, Whitwell Elwin, John Taylor Coleridge, Rowland Edmund Prothero Ernle, William Macpherson, William Smith (1883)
"London, 1882. 3. English Dramatists of To-day. By William Archer. 1882. 4.
Letters on some of Shakspeare's Female Characters. who has personated them (Helen ..."
7. A Treatise on the Law of New Trials in Cases Civil and Criminal by David Graham, Thomas Whitney Waterman (1855)
"(l) So when a juror, although regularly summoned and returned, personated another.
In Norman v. Beaumont,(2) Richard Geater, summoned and returned as a ..."