¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Deluders
1. deluder [n] - See also: deluder
Lexicographical Neighbors of Deluders
Literary usage of Deluders
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Works of George Fox by George Fox (1831)
"against us to be deceivers, deluders, heretics, and blasphemers, and such like,
and that our doctrines were deceivable, and error, and factious, ..."
2. A Short History of English Literature by George Saintsbury (1898)
"... figure is thoroughly supported by the group of his three deluders, and deluders
of each other, Subtle, Dol, and Face, while all the minor characters, ..."
3. The Annual Register edited by Edmund Burke (1840)
"“The deluders of the people succeeded in leading the people astray. The irresistible
moral tempest, which I had foreseen, was converted into hopeless and ..."
4. The New Annual Register, Or General Repository of History, Politics, and by Andrew Kippis, William Godwin, George Robinson (1818)
"Those who wete stigmatized in the speech were the deluders of the poor people
who were suffering under prii vations, and who had heads wicked, ..."
5. Pamphleteer by Abraham John Valpy (1817)
"... and stimulated them to outrage, by inculcating Rebellion as a duty, and
proscribing Charity as a crime ! These, Sir, are the deluders, against whom ..."
6. The Phrenological Journal and Miscellany (1824)
"It is not by any means clear, however, that the deluded would have established
the stomach and belly as the parts of speech, if the deluders had not ..."