¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Jugglers
1. juggler [n] - See also: juggler
Lexicographical Neighbors of Jugglers
Literary usage of Jugglers
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Encyclopaedia Americana: A Popular Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature by Francis Lieber, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford (1831)
"jugglers ; men who perform, in public, tricks of legerdemain. In the middle ages,
the name of jongleurs was given to the instrument-players who accompanied ..."
2. Social life of the Chinese: With Some Account of Their Religious by Justus Doolittle (1866)
"jugglers. IN this city there are not a few men who make their living by ...
Some very common jugglers' tricks are such as these: Lying down on the back and ..."
3. The Mimic World and Public Exhibitions: Their History, Their Morals, and Effects by Olive Logan (1871)
"About jugglers and Gymnasts — Hazlitt and the Italian Juggler.—The Mountebanks
of Paris. ... Japanese jugglers and Acrobats.—A Western Acrobat's Feat. ..."
4. Early English Prose Romances: With Bibliographical and Historical Introductions by William John Thoms (1858)
"... whereat the other jugglers kept that lilly, and so he took a small knife and
cut off the stalk of the lilly, saying, to himself, None of them shall ..."
5. A History of Inventions, Discoveries, and Origins by Johann Beckmann (1846)
"UNDER this title I comprehend not only those properly called jugglers, who, for
the sake of money, by quick and artful motions of their bands, bodies, ..."