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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Memorialist

Memorialist \Me*mo"ri*al*ist\, n. [Cf. F. m['e]morialiste.] One who writes or signs a memorial.

Wiktionary
memorialist

n. A writer of memorials.

Usage examples of "memorialist".

Moenghus had nodded in the weighty manner of a memorialist satisfied by powerful omens.

Traditional words, uttered by the groom as the memorialist braided his hair in marriage.

As editor, memorialist, and historian of modern learning Sacy was similarly energetic.

The memorialists say that battle is our hearth, earth our womb, and sky our yaksh.

And how could this be when the trackless Steppe dwelt, as the memorialists said, in all things Scylvendi?

City Library, the catalogue, to which your memorialists have recently published the first appendix, will be rendered quite useless and an expense, otherwise unnecessary, will be incurred.

To be a man, the memorialists said, was to take and not to be taken, to enslave and not to be enslaved.

Cnaiur explained the way the memorialists recited verses dedicated to each of the Nansur Columns, stories that described their devices, their arms, and their mettle in battle so that when the Tribes went on pilgrimage or to war, they could read the Nansur battle line.

Actually, it is doubtful that any of the memorialists had in mind an electorate that would include more than a small percentage of the Japanese people.

The memorialists were former samurai who espoused ideas of parliamentary democracy at this time primarily as a means to attack the Satsuma-Choshu oligarchs in the Meiji government.

His letters, his journals, the testimony of a dozen memorialists are at the disposal of the modern biographer.

Did he show you his answer to these precious Memorialists before he posted it?

The memorialists were former samurai who espoused ideas of parliamentary democracy at this time primarily as a means to attack the Satsuma-Choshu oligarchs in the Meiji government.

The impartial old Wraxall, the memorialist of the times of George III, having described a noble as a gambler, a drunkard, a smuggler, an appropriator of public money, who always cheated his tradesmen, who was one and sometimes all of them together, and a profligate generally, commonly adds, "But he was a perfect gentleman.