Definition of Excommunicators

1. Noun. (plural of excommunicator) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Excommunicators

1. excommunicator [n] - See also: excommunicator

Lexicographical Neighbors of Excommunicators

excogitator
excommune
excommuned
excommunes
excommunicable
excommunicant
excommunicants
excommunicate
excommunicated
excommunicates
excommunicating
excommunication
excommunications
excommunicative
excommunicator
excommunicators (current term)
excommuning
excommunion
exconjugant
excoriable
excoriate
excoriated
excoriates
excoriating
excoriatingly
excoriation
excoriations
excorticate
excorticated
excorticates

Literary usage of Excommunicators

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)
"And now is the seed of God risen, which overthrows all the excommunicators upon the earth, both beast, and false prophets, and Jews, which seed of God ..."

2. The Works of George Fox by George Fox (1831)
"... which overthrows all the excommunicators upon the earth, both beast, and false prophets, and Jews, which seed of God brings to see to the beginning. ..."

3. Sermons by Frederick Brooks, Phillips Brooks (1876)
"... repeating it to himself and forgetting his blind excommunicators, Christ meets him, and says, " Now you must believe on me, for you have seen me. ..."

4. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia for by American Philosophical Society (1883)
"The excommunicated hate the excommunicators ; exiles are emancipated from all respect and affection for government. The suppression of ideas by phys- ii:al ..."

5. The Ruined Abbeys of Great Britain by Ralph Adams Cram (1905)
"Nicholas (1255) was a member of the Royal Council and one of the excommunicators of the traitorous guardians of the youthful Alexander III.; later he was an ..."

6. The Metropolitan (1839)
"... they, therefore, (as they say,) have no fondness for what are called holy priests, and excommunicators, and exercisers, and that not only for the reason ..."

7. The Radical by Sidney H.. Morse, Joseph B.. Marvin (1869)
"The excommunicators, as well as the excommunicated, are victims of the system ; and it is the system, rather than the persons, which I am now accusing. ..."

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