¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Aerialists
1. aerialist [n] - See also: aerialist
Lexicographical Neighbors of Aerialists
Literary usage of Aerialists
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Transactions of the Epidemiological Society of London by Epidemiological Society of London (1905)
"It was stated, not long ago, by a highly respected authority, that aerialists
are the opponents of hospitals for small-pox ; but it appears now that ..."
2. The Bookman (1910)
"The average weekly pay of a good acrobatic family now ranges from $300 to $700.
aerialists build up families, the same way, and the groups of eight ..."
3. Watch Yourself Go by by Alfred Griffith Field (1912)
"However, the same salutes have been employed by all aerialists these many ...
After every trick the aerialists would come up smiling, seated on the lower ..."
4. Continental Stagecraft by Kenneth Macgowan, Robert Edmond Jones (1922)
"They turn their eyes with just as much appreciation to watch the aerialists,
plunging into their dangerous pastimes under the lights. ..."
5. Geographical Essays by William Morris Davis (1909)
"... the sub-aerialists differ as to the agency by which an elevated region may be
worn down to a nearly featureless plain, a little below or a little above ..."
6. Valleys and Their Relation to Fissures, Fractures, and Faults by George Henry Kinahan (1875)
"Pipes and pot-holes in limestone and chalk countries are supposed by sub- aerialists
to be "produced by the slow dissolving action of water charged with ..."
7. By and by by Edward Maitland (1873)
"It was to Criss alone of aerialists that the Dean had given permission to alight
and rest on the summit of his church. In the evening the whole party ..."