Definition of Appellors

1. appellor [n] - See also: appellor

Lexicographical Neighbors of Appellors

appellants
appellate
appellate court
appellate courts
appellate jurisdiction
appellation
appellations
appellative
appellatively
appellativeness
appellatives
appellatory
appellee
appellees
appellor
appellors (current term)
appels
appenage
appenages
append
appendage
appendaged
appendageless
appendagelike
appendages
appendages of eye
appendages of skin
appendages of the foetus
appendalgia
appendance

Literary usage of Appellors

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

1. A Constitutional History of the House of Lords by Luke Owen Pike (1894)
"The appellors were Thomas Duke of Gloucester, Constable of England, ... The appellors prayed the King and the Lords of Parliament that they would record the ..."

2. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann (1913)
"... 1782): "And the King's Pleasure is, that Thieves or appellors (whensoever they will) may confess their Offences unto Priests: but let the Confessors ..."

3. The Publications of the Selden Society by Selden Society (1888)
"[the appellors] by their house and their chattels, but without taking anything thence. And because the four townships mentioned above testify that ..."

4. A History of Crime in England: Illustrating the Changes of the Laws in the by Luke Owen Pike (1873)
"The gang lay in wait for the appellors and the finders of the indictments, punished them for what they had done, and menaced them with loss of limb or life ..."

5. An Ecclesiastical History of Great Britain by Jeremy Collier (1840)
"And the king's pleasure is, that thieves or appellors (whensoever they will), may confess their ... 28 they do uot erroneously inform such appellors. ..."

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