¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Captivators
1. captivator [n] - See also: captivator
Lexicographical Neighbors of Captivators
Literary usage of Captivators
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Nick of the Woods: Or, The Jibbenainosay; a Tale of Kentucky by Robert Montgomery Bird (1853)
"And then, friend thee sees, there was no stopping, there being the third of thee
captivators to lool after ; and, truly, as I had done so much, ..."
2. Old New England Churches and Their Children by Mary Schell Hoke Bacon (1906)
"November, by a scout under my command, and, according to a resolve passed by the
Honorable Continental Congress, that all prizes belong to the captivators ..."
3. Orations & Essays of Edward John Phelps: Diplomat and Statesman by Edward John Phelps (1901)
"November by a scout under my command; and according to a resolve passed by the
Honorable Continental Congress that all prizes belong to the captivators ..."
4. Seeing the Eastern States by John Thomson Faris (1922)
"... belong to the captivators thereof, therefore she and her Child became the just
Property of the ..."
5. Vermont: The Green Mountain State by Walter Hill Crockett (1921)
"... (prizes) belong to the captivators thereof—therefore She and her Child became
the just Property of the ..."
6. Catalogue of the Principal Officers of Vermont: As Connected with Its by Leonard Deming (1851)
"... belong to the captivators thereof—therefore She and her Child became the just
Property of the ..."