¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Interpreters
1. interpreter [n] - See also: interpreter
Lexicographical Neighbors of Interpreters
Literary usage of Interpreters
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Arena by Harry Houdini Collection (Library of Congress) (1905)
"the bird-interpreters cry out, of late. It better suits them to have the ...
The bird-interpreters insist that every nuthatch is like every other one of its ..."
2. Journal by General Assembly, Pennsylvania General Assembly. Senate, Pennsylvania (1920)
"These counties do not now have regular court interpreters, and it is necessary
to employ them only in those counties that have a large foreign population in ..."
3. Side-lights on English Society: Or Sketches from Life, Social & Satirical by Eustace Clare Grenville Murray (1881)
"interpreters are now employed for the most part only in embassies out of Europe.
... The interpreters employed by the Turkish Government in their ..."
4. United States Supreme Court Reports by United States Supreme Court, Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company (1901)
""The salaries of interpreters lawfully employed in the service of the United
States in Oregon, Utah and New Mexico, shall be $500 a year each, ..."
5. The Social Welfare Forum: Official Proceedings ... Annual Forum by National Conference on Social Welfare, American Social Science Association, Conference of Charities (U.S., Conference of Charities (U.S.), National Conference of Social Work (U.S. (1920)
"This becomes the more clear if you conceive social work as community morale
building; then social workers appear in the light of interpreters of fundamental ..."
6. Science and Hebrew Tradition by Thomas Henry Huxley (1897)
"IV THE interpreters OF GENESIS AND THE interpreters OF NATURE [1885] OUR fabulist
warns " those who in quarrels interpose " of the fate which is probably in ..."
7. Leviathan ; Or, The Matter, Forme & Power of a Commonwealth, Ecclesiasticall by Thomas Hobbes, Alfred Rayney Waller (1904)
"Of the Number, Antiquity, Scof>e, Authority, and interpreters of the Books of
Holy SCRIPTURE. BY the Books of Holy SCRIPTURE, are understood those, ..."