¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Glossarists
1. glossarist [n] - See also: glossarist
Lexicographical Neighbors of Glossarists
Literary usage of Glossarists
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Pandects: A Treatise on the Roman Law and Upon Its Connection with by Joel Emanuel Goudsmit (1873)
"THE glossarists. At the commencement of the twelfth century '), the town of
Bologna became the seat of a flourishing school, to which the nature of its ..."
2. Historical Introduction to the Private Law of Rome by James Muirhead, Henry Goudy (1899)
"The authoritative edition, prepared from the best manuscripts, with restitution
of all that the glossarists had excised, is that of Kriiger (Berlin, ..."
3. The History and Principles of the Civil Law of Rome: An Aid to the Study of by Sheldon Amos (1883)
"The Middle-Age Universities and tie glossarists. The next distinct stage in the
history of the civil law in Europe is marked by the practice of the public ..."
4. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: “a” Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature edited by Hugh Chisholm (1911)
"The manuscripts of these, as used by the glossarists, are called the Vulgate ...
The whole Corpus Juris was by the glossarists distributed into five volumes ..."
5. The Protestant Theological and Ecclesiastical Encyclopedia by John Henry Augustus Bomberger, Johann Jakob Herzog (1860)
"Its teachers were called glossarists, because they added to the Corpus juris,
... Several of his student«, «fter tie manner of the glossarists, ..."