Definition of Soliloquizers

1. soliloquizer [n] - See also: soliloquizer

Lexicographical Neighbors of Soliloquizers

soliform
solifugae
solifuge
solifugid
solifugids
soliloquies
soliloquise
soliloquised
soliloquises
soliloquising
soliloquist
soliloquists
soliloquize
soliloquized
soliloquizer
soliloquizers
soliloquizes
soliloquizing
soliloquy
soling
solion
solions
soliped
solipedous
solipeds
solipsism
solipsisms
solipsist
solipsistic
solipsistically

Literary usage of Soliloquizers

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

1. The Soliloquies of Shakespeare: A Study in Technic by Morris LeRoy Arnold (1911)
"He is the outgrowth of such fantastic soliloquizers as Biron of " Love's Labor's Lost"; and Benedick's railings against love have remote prototypes in the ..."

2. The Soliloquies of Shakespeare: A Study in Technic by Morris LeRoy Arnold (1911)
"He is the outgrowth of such fantastic soliloquizers as Biron of "Love's Labor's Lost"; and Benedick's railings against love have remote prototypes in the ..."

3. The Soliloquies of Shakespeare: A Study in Technic by Morris LeRoy Arnold (1911)
"He is the outgrowth of such fantastic soliloquizers as Biron of " Love's Labor's Lost"; and Benedick's railings against love have remote prototypes in the ..."

4. Shakespeare's Theater by Ashley Horace Thorndike (1916)
"The amount of business provided for tragic soliloquizers is especially interesting because it indicates the feeling of a need of some action and movement to ..."

5. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1821)
"... and the deviation is not to be forgiven, To illustrate writing by speech, they were too much soliloquizers for the gossiping spirit of their nation, ..."

6. The New World and the New Book, an Address, Delivered Before the Nineteenth by Thomas Wentworth Higginson (1892)
"This does not involve pedantry, although it is possible to be pedantic even in fiction, as Victor Hugo's endless and tiresome soliloquizers show. ..."

7. The New World and the New Book, an Address, Delivered Before the Nineteenth by Thomas Wentworth Higginson (1892)
"This does not involve pedantry, although it is possible to be pedantic even in fiction, as Victor Hugo's endless and tiresome soliloquizers show. ..."

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