¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Translators
1. translator [n] - See also: translator
Lexicographical Neighbors of Translators
Literary usage of Translators
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Journal of Theological Studies (1903)
"In attempting to prove a plurality of translators in any book or group of books
in the LXX ... The first is that the translators did not, for the most part, ..."
2. Instigations of Ezra Pound: Together with an Essay on the Chinese Written by Ezra Pound, Ernest Francisco Fenollosa (1920)
"... of freedom is loath to approach a masterpiece through five hundred pages of
grammar. Even a scholar like Porson may confer with former translators. ..."
3. A Short History of English Literature by George Saintsbury (1898)
"CHAPTER VI LYLY AND HOOKER — THE translators, PAMPHLETEERS, AND CRITICS Ascham's
prose — Defects of the type — The ebb and flow of style — Euphuism — ! ..."
4. A History of English Poetry by William John Courthope (1903)
"... is important, for the purposes of history, both as showing a change of spirit
since the earlier period in the minds of the translators themselves, ..."
5. A History of English Prosody from the Twelfth Century to the Present Day by George Saintsbury (1906)
"... the translators,' and lastly Sackville, dominating, but bringing with him and
under his In[tro]duction, the contributors to the Mirror for Magistrates. ..."
6. Ireland's Literary Renaissance by Ernest Augustus Boyd (1922)
"CHAPTER III SOURCES THE translators: GEORGE SIGERSON. ... The work of the
translators and folklorists who collected, transcribed and translated these folk ..."
7. The Age of Shakespeare (1579-1631) by Thomas Seccombe, John William Allen (1903)
"Chapman: the Verse translators. At the head of the list of Elizabethan translators
stands George Chapman, whose great translation (1559-1634) * of ^e wor^s ..."