¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Liars
1. liar [n] - See also: liar
Lexicographical Neighbors of Liars
Literary usage of Liars
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Handy-book of Literary Curiosities by William Shepard Walsh (1892)
"For if the Cretians are not always liars, then the Cretian prophet was nut always
a liar, and told the truth when he said that they were always liars. ..."
2. Stories of a Country Doctor by Willis Percival King (1891)
"SEVERAL SAMPLES WHICH ANSWER THE QUESTION—AX ASYLUM FOR liars. T is a puzzling
thing, to any one who has studied humanity to any extent, that there are so ..."
3. Forensic Oratory: A Manual for Advocates by William Callyhan Robinson (1893)
"liars of the first two classes are not chargeable with grievous moral turpitude.
Their faults are natural, usually imperceptible to themselves, though often ..."
4. Rawhide Rawlins Stories by Charles Marion Russell (1921)
"These men weren't vicious liars. It was love of romance, lack of reading matter
and the wish to be entertainin' that makes 'em stretch facts and invent ..."
5. Dictionary of Quotations from Ancient and Modern English and Foreign Sources by James Wood (1899)
"liars are the cause of all the sins aud crimes in the world. ... liars ought to
have good memories. Sidney. ..."
6. The British and American Drama of To-day: Outlines for Their Study by Barrett Harper Clark (1921)
"The liars " is as fine an example of the comedy of manners in England as any
written during the past quarter of a century. The skilful plot-construction, ..."