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Definition of Personifier
1. n. One who personifies.
Definition of Personifier
1. Noun. A person who personifies ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Personifier
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Personifier
Literary usage of Personifier
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Pre- and Proto-historic Finns, Both Eastern and Western, with the Magic by Baron John Abercromby Abercromby (1898)
"The personifier, after being embraced by the old women, is laid on the bed, ...
The ceremony is now over; the personifier makes a bow, suddenly springs up ..."
2. The Pre- and Proto-historic Finns, Both Eastern and Western: With the Magic by John Abercromby (1898)
"The personifier, after being embraced by the old women, is laid on the bed, ...
The ceremony is now over; the personifier makes a bow, suddenly springs up ..."
3. Safe and Unsafe Democracy: A Commentary on Political Administration in the by Henry Ware Jones (1918)
"A " Colonizer " is usually not a lawful local elector; he is merely a fraudulent
personifier of such an elector. He may through connivance succeed in ..."
4. The Teacher and His Staff: Differentiating Teaching Roles: Report of the by Thomas Charles Bridges, H Hessell Tiltman, National Commission on Teacher Education and Professional Standards (U.S.) (1909)
"It is the principal's job, as personifier of the philosophy, to build into his
school the kind of organizational climate which makes the school a safe place ..."
5. Curiosities of Literature by Isaac Disraeli (1859)
"Is it not marvel," continues the personifier of Stucley, " that he was angry with
me at his death for bringing him back ? Besides, being a man of so ..."
6. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society by Historical Society of Great Britain (1877)
"... to some superior power; and very soon in man's history the recipient of this
submission is seen to be the human personifier of the divine authority. ..."
7. Shakespeare and His Times: Including the Biography of the Poet; Criticism on by Nathan Drake (1817)
"... were the avowed patrons of piety and prayer : " Go you," exclaims the personifier
of one of these tiny moralists, addressing his companions, " black, ..."