Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Plural form of copartner.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • It was a foretaste of Paradise to the women, for it must be confessed that the white rovers gave far better care and treatment of them than did their Indian copartners.

    The Wife of a King 2010

  • It was a foretaste of Paradise to the women, for it must be confessed that the white rovers gave far better care and treatment of them than did their Indian copartners.

    The Wife of a King 2010

  • My copartners are Jack Kemp and Jeane Kirkpatrick, and it's a very interesting place, a good place.

    The Book of Virtues 1994

  • And he who there finds rest unto his soul, dares not admit of any copartners with him as to instruction in the mind of God.

    Christologia 1616-1683 1965

  • If holiness of life be preached as necessary to salvation, then faith is undervalued and set below its place, and works, as to justification with God, set up and made copartners with Christ's merits in the remission of sins.

    The Riches of Bunyan Jeremiah Rev. Chaplin

  • But however this may be, the question, involving, as it does, a principle of equality of rights of the separate and several States as equal copartners in the

    State of the Union Address (1790-2001) United States. Presidents.

  • That the Gentiles should be fellow heirs and of the same body: and copartners of his promise in Christ Jesus, by the gospel

    The Bible, Douay-Rheims, Complete Anonymous

  • American named Marshall, a sort of millwright, to do this work for him, but Marshall afterward claimed that in the matter of the saw-mill they were copartners.

    Memoirs of the Union's Three Great Civil War Generals David Widger

  • These experiments, it seems, were so successful that Dyar and his relatives resolved to construct a line from New York to Philadelphia; but quarrels with his copartners, lawsuits, and other causes obliged him to leave for Rhode Island, and finally for France in 1831.

    Scientific American Supplement, No. 384, May 12, 1883 Various

  • Pressed on all sides, the adventurers, for a period of eight months, bore up against accumulated misfortunes; when at length, receiving no succours from their copartners at home, convinced that they had to contend against the hostility of the

    Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 54, No. 337, November, 1843 Various

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