¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Revivalists
1. revivalist [n] - See also: revivalist
Lexicographical Neighbors of Revivalists
Literary usage of Revivalists
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Methodist Review (1886)
"ABOUT Revivalists. " By their fruits ye shall know them " is a standard ...
After a careful study of the matter of traveling revivalists for more than a ..."
2. The Congregational Review (1865)
"But the question with us in this discussion is, whether it ia wise to employ
itinerant revivalists as special promoters of religion? ..."
3. The Imperial Gazetteer of India by William Wilson Hunter, Great Britain India Office (1908)
"between them, the latter being pure revivalists, while the former subscribe to
the extreme views of the original Wahhabis regarding infidels. ..."
4. Shakespearean Representation; Its Laws and Limits by Percy Hetherington Fitzgerald (1908)
"CHAPTER IV MODERN Revivalists—IRVING ONE of the most welcome and almost ...
He was certainly the most accomplished of all the revivalists that can be ..."
5. The Antiquary by Edward Walford, John Charles Cox, George Latimer Apperson (1888)
"towns, and thus we meet with a school of agricultural revivalists that was never
weary of proving the advantage of the Crown in the old order of things, ..."
6. The Civil, Ecclesiastical, Literary, Commercial, and Miscellaneous History by Edward Parsons (1834)
"THE FEMALE Revivalists, whose opinions correspond with those of the ...
The Revivalists have prosperous schools connected with their congregations. ..."
7. The Christian Examiner and Religious Miscellany by Alvan Lamson, Ezra Stiles Gannett, George Putnam, George Edward Ellis (1847)
"V. — EDWARDS AND THE Revivalists. A CHAPTER or NEW ENGLAND ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY.
IN the works of religious writers at the beginning of the last century, ..."