¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Enactors
1. enactor [n] - See also: enactor
Lexicographical Neighbors of Enactors
Literary usage of Enactors
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Constitutional Convention: Its History, Powers, and Modes of Proceeding. by John Alexander Jameson (1867)
"The people of a commonwealth sustain to its Constitution a double relation, —
first, that of its enactors; and, secondly, that of citizens amenable to its ..."
2. A Treatise on Constitutional Conventions: Their History, Powers, and Modes by John Alexander Jameson (1887)
"The people of a commonwealth sustain to its Constitution a double relation, —
first, that of its enactors; and, secondly, that of citizens amenable to its ..."
3. A Treatise on Constitutional Conventions: Their History, Powers, and Modes by John Alexander Jameson (1887)
"The people of a commonwealth sustain to its Constitution a double relation, '—first,
that of its enactors; and, secondly, that of citizen* amenable to its ..."
4. Reports of Cases in Law and Equity in the Supreme Court of the State of New York by Oliver Lorenzo Barbour, New York (State). Supreme Court (1871)
"The language of the judiciary article clearly shows that the enactors of the ...
The object of the enactors of the judiciary article, and the effect of the ..."
5. An Essay on Judicial Power and Unconstitutional Legislation, Being a by Brinton Coxe (1893)
"Its enactors spoke in restrictive, prescriptive and prohibitive words directed
against persons, and making express mention of clerical men. ..."
6. An Essay on Judicial Power and Unconstitutional Legislation, Being a by Brinton Coxe (1893)
"Its enactors spoke in restrictive, prescriptive and prohibitive words directed
against persons, and making express mention of clerical men. ..."
7. The London Encyclopaedia, Or, Universal Dictionary of Science, Art by Thomas Tegg (1829)
"Shakspeare uses enactors (fol. edit.) in the last sense. ... U. The violence of
either grief or joy, Their own enactors with themselves destroy. ..."