¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Rhetoricians
1. rhetorician [n] - See also: rhetorician
Lexicographical Neighbors of Rhetoricians
Literary usage of Rhetoricians
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Source Book of the History of Education for the Greek and Roman Period by Paul Monroe (1915)
"tion of character, and the like; in order that they might not transfer their
pupils to the rhetoricians no better than ill-taught boys. ..."
2. A History of Criticism and Literary Taste in Europe from the Earliest Texts by George Saintsbury (1902)
"tolerably fair herd of humanist rhetoricians to fill the ninety The begin- ...
But the only names of rhetoricians. much interest that appear in it are those ..."
3. History of European Morals from Augustus to Charlemagne by William Edward Hartpole Lecky (1869)
"The rhetoricians were a kind of itinerant lecturers, who went about from city to
city, delivering harangues that were often received with the keenest ..."
4. History of European Morals from Augustus to Charlemagne by William Edward Hartpole Lecky (1869)
"The rhetoricians were a kind of itinerant lecturers, who went about from city to
city, delivering harangues that were often received with the keenest ..."
5. Teuffels̓ History of Roman Literature by Wilhelm Sigismund Teuffel (1891)
"7.9 and 10 (containing 35 themes), have come down to us, partly with gaps,
especially when the utterances of Greek rhetoricians had been quoted in the ..."
6. The Roman Empire of the Second Century: Or, The Age of Antonines by William Wolfe Capes (1897)
"^S^nd These were literary artists, word-fanciers, and rhetoricians rhetoricians,
whose fluent speech and studied graces won for them oftentimes a world-wide ..."
7. The History of the Arts and Sciences of the Antients, Under the Following by Charles Rollin (1768)
"OF THE LATIN rhetoricians. T was not without difficulty and ... and rhetoricians,
who went to Rome, carried thither ..."