¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Citers
1. citer [n] - See also: citer
Lexicographical Neighbors of Citers
Literary usage of Citers
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Ecclesiastical Records, State of New York by New York (State). State Historian, Hugh Hastings, James Austin Holden, Edward Tanjore Corwin (1902)
"We, who hold to the true doctrine and discipline, do not, as the citers intimate,
... Because the citers had not yet called us a Seceded Assembly ? ..."
2. European Theories of the Drama: An Anthology of Dramatic Theory and by Barrett Harper Clark (1918)
"... threatens Ptolemy, and wants to force him to slay the in- citers of this attack
und illustrious death. The latter, surprised at the unexpected welcome, ..."
3. The Harvard Classics by Charles William Eliot (1910)
"... to thee are in- citers and rousers of my mind, which now causeth my heart
almost to burst in my breast, ..."
4. History of Civilization in England by Henry Thomas Buckle (1866)
"citers and composers of these songs arc the recognized judges in all disputed
matters ; and as they are often priests, and believed to be inspired, ..."
5. James Monroe by Daniel Coit Gilman, John Franklin Jameson (1911)
"... and to carry the pursuit of the Indians so far as to prevent further disturbance
from them, or from their in- citers, English or Spanish; but care, ..."
6. European Theories of the Drama: An Anthology of Dramatic Theory and by Barrett Harper Clark (1918)
"... and wants to force him to slay the in- citers of this attack and illustrious
death. self with the worry and displeasures of those to whom it gives the ..."