¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Commemorators
1. commemorator [n] - See also: commemorator
Lexicographical Neighbors of Commemorators
Literary usage of Commemorators
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. In the Andamans and Nicobars: The Narrative of a Cruise in the Schooner by Cecil Boden Kloss (1903)
"... one family of the commemorators of the ceremony to the people of a whole
village, that the hosts may give a performance in their house on the occasion. ..."
2. Picturesque History of Yorkshire: Being an Account of the History by Joseph Smith Fletcher (1900)
"It is on the grave of a wife whose commemorators seem to have thought her hardly
dealt with, if not exactly imposed upon :— " Farewell, my husband and ..."
3. Alice-for-short: A Dichronism by William Frend De Morgan (1907)
"... the reception of visitors anxious that somebody else should not be forgotten,
and that they themselves should be borne in mind as his commemorators. ..."
4. Boston, the Place and the People by Mark Antony De Wolfe Howe (1903)
"Indeed the spirit of contemporary annalists of the occasion is rather that of
persons who are themselves making history than of mere commemorators of the ..."
5. Mazzini, and Other Essays by Henry Demarest Lloyd (1910)
"None of their commemorators has said more reverential words of the Puritans than he.
But he passes in one sentence from an almost choral admiration of the ..."