¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Abominators
1. abominator [n] - See also: abominator
Lexicographical Neighbors of Abominators
Literary usage of Abominators
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Parliamentary Debatesby Great Britain Parliament, Thomas Curson Hansard by Great Britain Parliament, Thomas Curson Hansard (1826)
"... said—" What ! send sixteen peers and forty-five commoners to England—send the
flower of our flock to the lund of bishops and abominators! ..."
2. The Traditions of European Literature: From Homer to Dante by Barrett Wendell (1920)
"... a great many generations of simple-minded cloistered human beings, devout and
unquestioning abominators of infidelity and heresy, and bound—often from ..."
3. The Life of Lord Chancellor Hardwicke: With Selections from His by George Harris (1847)
"However cheering to the abominators of bloodshed, the establishment of a peace
between warring nations has occasionally been, yet, to the mind of the ..."
4. Benthamiana, Or, Select Extracts from the Works of Jeremy Bentham: With an by Jeremy Bentham, John Hill Burton (1844)
"... I have thus heard successively denied by their respective abominators.
In printed books I have observed doubts, next in force to denial, expressed with ..."
5. The English Spy: An Original Work, Characteristic, Satirical, and Humorous by Charles Molloy Westmacott (1826)
"... but having studied the wise maxims of Pythagoras, and being a disciple of the
Brahma school, abominators of flesh and strong liquors, he hoped to be ..."