Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
colaborer .
Etymologies
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Examples
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Muhlenberg and his colaborers was the door through which, in the days of
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In this the skill and ingenuity displayed and the originality was not separable from that of her colaborers.
Final Report of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission
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But these gradually subsided, until there was hardly an antislavery editor of average discernment who did not come to see that a national organ like the Era, by legitimating discussion and keeping up the heat and blaze of a vigorous agitation, at the nation's very centre, against that nation's own giant crime, would prove a benefit, in the end, to all colaborers worthy of the name.
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 17, No. 104, June, 1866 Various
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The presence of a weekly journal on the farm, with its varieties of current literature, poetry and music, could not but awaken in many of the colaborers most pleasurable emotions.
Brook Farm John Thomas Codman
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Antislavery Reform into the very stronghold of the enemy's country; and to say that he maintained his position with integrity and success is but to pronounce the common praise of his contemporaries and colaborers.
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 17, No. 104, June, 1866 Various
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Like his colaborers in this work, he experienced only a mortal sadness under which he sank.
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Presbyterian Church, devoting most of his time to the many movements which attracted the attention of his colaborers.
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While Dr. Pennington did not drift so far from the ministry as many of his colaborers, he was at once in demand for work in various other fields.
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The appearance of these war stories in book form is due largely to the interest manifested in them by two of my most efficient and helpful colaborers during my superintendency of the Macon public schools, Mrs.A. E. Keenan,
War stories and school-day incidents for the children, Berrien McPherson 1912
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It was the desire to train up white men to carry on the work of their liberal fathers that led John G. Fee and his colaborers to establish
The Education of the Negro Prior to 1861 A History of the Education of the Colored People of the United States from the Beginning of Slavery to the Civil War Carter Godwin Woodson 1912
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