¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Protesters
1. protester [n] - See also: protester
Lexicographical Neighbors of Protesters
Literary usage of Protesters
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Enron Corporation: Corporate Complicity in Human Rights Violations by Human Rights Watch (Organization) (1999)
"Arrests of protesters According to three Indian human rights organizations—the
Center for Holistic Studies, the All India Peoples' Resistance Forum ..."
2. The Enron Corporation: Corporate Complicity in Human Rights Violations by Human Rights Watch (Organization) (1999)
"Arrests of protesters According to three Indian human rights organizations—the
Center for Holistic Studies, the All India Peoples' Resistance Forum ..."
3. Repression of Montagnards: Conflicts Over Land and Religion in Vietnam's by Sidney Jones, Malcolm Smart (2002)
"We trust him but think he was coerced.257 As in Pleiku, a group of protesters
was able to meet briefly with local officials and hand over documents ..."
4. Politics and Religion: A Study in Scottish History from the Reformation to by William Law Mathieson (1902)
"2 Happily there was no reason to fear that the protesters would succeed in reviving
the intolerant 1 This particular contention indeed, ..."
5. Politics and Religion: A Study in Scottish History from the Reformation to by William Law Mathieson (1902)
"2 Happily there was no reason to fear that the protesters would succeed in reviving
the intolerant 1 This particular contention indeed, ..."
6. Church History by Johann Heinrich Kurtz (1889)
"THE CHURCH AGAINST THE protesters. The church was by no means indifferent to the
spread of those heresies of the 11th and 12th centuries, which called in ..."
7. A History of England by James Franck Bright (1889)
"... the protesters Cromwell, trusting to the character of their religious views,
had some hope of securing, and negotiations were set on foot with them; ..."
8. A History of England by James Franck Bright (1880)
"The support of the protesters Cromwell, trusting to the character of their
religious views, had some hope of securing ..."