¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Diarists
1. diarist [n] - See also: diarist
Lexicographical Neighbors of Diarists
Literary usage of Diarists
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Short History of English Literature by George Saintsbury (1898)
"... Royal Society and style — Banyan — His four chief things — The English Rogue—
Thomas Burnet — GUn- vill — The diarists—Evelyn—Pepys—Roger North — Minors ..."
2. The Works of George Meredith by George Meredith (1897)
"DIANA OF THE CROSSWAYS CHAPTER I OF DIARIES AND diarists TOUCHING THE HEROINE
AMONG the Diaries beginning with the second quarter of our century, ..."
3. The Quarterly Review by William Gifford, John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero Ernle, George Walter Prothero (1903)
"Art. Vm.—diarists OP THE LAST CENTURY. 1» A portion of the Journal kept by T.
Raikes, Esq., from 1831 to 1847. Four vols. Second edition. ..."
4. American Literature in the Colonial and National Periods by Lorenzo Sears (1902)
"Ill PLYMOUTH diarists THIRTEEN years after one hundred Englishmen landed in
Virginia amid the bloom and fragrance of the southern springtime, ..."
5. The House in St. Martin's Street: Being Chronicles of the Burney Family by Constance Hill (1907)
"... YOUNGEST OF THE diarists AMONG the Burney manuscripts there is a small square
packet of thin yellowish paper containing- twenty-three pages of writing, ..."
6. A Manual of English Literature by Henry Morley, Moses Coit Tyler (1879)
"CHAPTER X. SECOND HALF OP THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY: HISTORIANS, BIOGRAPHERS,
diarists, AND ESSAYISTS. I. Lord Clarendon. —2. Samuel Pepys.— 3. ..."
7. The Old Venetian Palaces and Old Venetian Folk by Thomas Okey (1907)
"CHAPTER XIV The empty chambers of the Ducal Palace and their former occupants—The
Triad of Great diarists, Malipiero, Priuli and Sanudo—Career of a busy ..."