¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Faultfinders
1. faultfinder [n] - See also: faultfinder
Lexicographical Neighbors of Faultfinders
Literary usage of Faultfinders
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Missions and Missionaries of California by Zephyrin Engelhardt (1912)
"faultfinders.—Making Converts.—Deserters.—Position of the Neophytes.—Education.—Senator
Carmack.—Charles F. Lummis.—Commissioner Jones. ..."
2. Expository lectures on st. Paul's Epistles to the Corinthians by Frederick William Robertson (1872)
"There are political faultfinders who lament over the evil of the times, ...
There are ecclesiastical faultfinders, who can see no good anywhere in the ..."
3. Sermons Preached at Trinity Chapel, Brighton by Frederick William Robertson (1869)
"There are political faultfinders, who lament over the evil of the times, ...
There are ecclesiastical faultfinders, who can see no good anywhere in the ..."
4. Sermons on St. Paul's Epistles to the Corinthians: Delivered at Trinity by Frederick William Robertson (1868)
"There are political faultfinders, who lament over the evil of the times, ...
There are ecclesiastical faultfinders, who can see no good anywhere in the ..."
5. The Sunny Side of the Street by Marshall Pinckney Wilder (1905)
"JOURNALISTS AND AUTHORS Not All Journalists are Critics, nor are All Critics
faultfinders.—The Most Savage Newspapers not the Most Influential. ..."
6. Recollections of a Visit to Great Britain and Ireland in the Summer of 1862 by Morphy, J. (John) (1863)
"Notwithstanding the truth of the foregoing remarks, we are all the better for
having faultfinders. There are two classes only in the community; ie, ..."