¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Cosignatories
1. cosignatory [n] - See also: cosignatory
Lexicographical Neighbors of Cosignatories
Literary usage of Cosignatories
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Life and Times of Queen Victoria by Robert Wilson (1893)
"Austria and Prussia, being cosignatories of the Treaty of London, found it a
little embarrassing to take the initiative in " denouncing" that futile ..."
2. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1876)
"... in its place of a virtual Muscovite supremacy which no single Power in Europe,
not even the cosignatories of the Note, was prepared to acquiesce in. ..."
3. The Inside Story of the Peace Conference by Emile Joseph Dillon (1920)
"... rendered it indispensable that Italy's recalcitrant plenipotentiaries should
be cosignatories, or at any rate consenting parties. ..."
4. The Secret Treaties of Austria-Hungary, 1879-1914 by Alfred Francis Pribram (1921)
"It was the business of Italy's cosignatories to look out for the compensating
counter-services. Germany had already announced her wishes in Rome, ..."
5. Under Four Administrations: From Cleveland to Taft by Oscar Solomon Straus (1922)
"... its moral support to the fulfillment thereof by its cosignatories, for the
act of Roumania itself has effectively joined the United States to them as an ..."
6. The New York Times Current History (1917)
"In spite of their protests and appeals to Germany and France as cosignatories of
the treaty, in spite of the answer that they would defend themselves ..."