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Definition of Communicatory
1. Adjective. Able or tending to communicate. "Was a communicative person and quickly told all she knew"
Also: Articulate, Voluble
Similar to: Anecdotal, Anecdotic, Anecdotical, Bantu-speaking, Blabbermouthed, Leaky, Talebearing, Tattling, Chatty, Gossipy, Newsy, Communicable, Communicational, English-speaking, Expansive, Talkative, Expressive, Finno-ugric-speaking, Flemish-speaking, French-speaking, Gaelic-speaking, German-speaking, Gesticulating, Gestural, Nonverbal, Gestural, Sign, Sign-language, Signed, Heraldic, Icelandic-speaking, Italian-speaking, Japanese-speaking, Kannada-speaking, Livonian-speaking, Narrative, Nonverbal, Nonverbal, Openhearted, Oscan-speaking, Outspoken, Vocal, Russian-speaking, Samoyedic-speaking, Semitic-speaking, Siouan-speaking, Spanish-speaking, Turkic-speaking, Verbal, Yarn-spinning
Derivative terms: Communicate, Communicate, Communicate, Communicativeness, Communicate, Communicate, Communicate
Antonyms: Uncommunicative
Definition of Communicatory
1. a. Imparting knowledge or information.
Definition of Communicatory
1. Adjective. Whose function is to communicate ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Communicatory
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Communicatory
Literary usage of Communicatory
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Tales of the North Riding by Mary Linskill (1893)
"communicatory. THE first time I was at Thorpe-Houe the friendship existing between
4he Dents and the ..."
2. The History of the Apostles Creed: With Critical Observations on Its Several by Peter King King (1804)
"... returned him a communicatory letter, acknowledging him to be bishop of that
part of the universal church, and promising to hold Communion with him as a ..."
3. A Dictionary of Christian Antiquities: Comprising the History, Institutions by William Smith, Samuel Cheetham (1880)
"9) :—" Concerning those who present letters of confessors, it is decreed that
such letters be taken from them, and that they receive others communicatory. ..."
4. Origines Ecclesiasticæ: The Antiquities of the Christian Church. With Two by Joseph Bingham (1856)
"And such travellers as came to any foreign church without communicatory letters
to testify their orthodoxy and pious conversation, were presumed to be under ..."