Definition of Inculcators

1. Noun. (plural of inculcator) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Inculcators

1. inculcator [n] - See also: inculcator

Lexicographical Neighbors of Inculcators

incudiform
incudiform uterus
incudomalleal
incudomalleolar articulation
incudomalleolar joint
incudostapedial
incudostapedial articulation
incudostapedial joint
inculcate
inculcated
inculcates
inculcating
inculcation
inculcations
inculcator
inculcators (current term)
inculk
inculked
inculking
inculks
inculpability
inculpable
inculpableness
inculpably
inculpate
inculpated
inculpates
inculpating
inculpation
inculpations

Literary usage of Inculcators

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A Guide to the Best Fiction in English by William Winter, George Saintsbury, Ernest Albert Baker (1918)
"The inculcators are heavily freighted with Moral Lessons, and are never weary of ... Hermann Sudermann appears to be a member of the tribe of inculcators. ..."

2. The Wallet of Time: Containing Personal, Biographical, and Critical by William Winter (1913)
"The inculcators are heavily freighted with Moral Lessons, and are never weary of ... Hermann Sudermann appears to be a member of the tribe of inculcators. ..."

3. The Contemporary Review (1872)
"dry up at any moment, it must be deepened by the sense of individual liking, which is exactly the one thing against which the ordinary inculcators of ..."

4. The Yale Review by Yale University, George Park Fisher, George Burton Adams, Henry Walcott Farnam, Arthur Twining Hadley, John Christopher Schwab, William Fremont Blackman, Edward Gaylord Bourne, Irving Fisher, Henry Crosby Emery, Wilbur Lucius Cross (1906)
"The Jesuits were often, no doubt, especially in later decades, examples of apathy and inculcators of superstition, but "the conquest and colonization of ..."

5. The Autobiography of Leigh Hunt by Leigh Hunt, Thornton Leigh Hunt (1860)
"... between the professional, and as it were exemplary kind of gravity expected of the inculcators of any creed, and the natural spirits, and old cheerful ..."

6. Main Currents in Nineteenth Century Literature by Georg Morris Cohen Brandes (1906)
"One would imagine that, in this instance at least, Rousseau's theories would meet with the approval of the stern inculcators of duty. ..."

Other Resources:

Search for Inculcators on Dictionary.com!Search for Inculcators on Thesaurus.com!Search for Inculcators on Google!Search for Inculcators on Wikipedia!

Search