How do you use Chroniclers in a sentence? See 10+ example sentences showing how this word appears in different contexts, plus the exact meaning.
Chroniclers meaning
plural of chronicler
Using Chroniclers
- The main meaning on this page is: plural of chronicler
- In the example corpus, chroniclers often appears in combinations such as: the chroniclers, contemporary chroniclers, chroniclers of.
Context around Chroniclers
- Average sentence length in these examples: 25.2 words
- Position in the sentence: 12 start, 5 middle, 3 end
- Sentence types: 20 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis for Chroniclers
- In this selection, "chroniclers" usually appears near the start of the sentence. The average example has 25.2 words, and this corpus slice is mostly made up of statements.
- Around the word, christian, islamic, gifted, call, themselves and rarely stand out and add context to how "chroniclers" is used.
- Recognizable usage signals include although some chroniclers felt that and and its chroniclers. That gives this page its own corpus information beyond isolated example sentences.
- By corpus frequency, "chroniclers" sits close to words such as aarp, abdi and abuzz, which helps place it inside the broader word index.
Example types with chroniclers
The same corpus examples are grouped by length and sentence type, making it easier to see the contexts in which the word appears:
He may well have been describing both the place and its chroniclers. (12 words)
According to some chroniclers, Mieszko II expelled his two brothers from the country. (13 words)
Later Iberian Christian chroniclers call her Al Mutamid's daughter, but the Islamic chroniclers are considered more reliable. (18 words)
It was contemporary Indian chroniclers who called this period “the anarchy”, due to the waves of invasion and civil war that shook Mughal power and allowed a host of regional actors – of which the company was merely one – to gain ascendancy. (41 words)
According to one of the chroniclers of the time, he was given the epithet of the "Red" when in 981 he invited the most troublesome of the Roman families to a banquet, and proceeded to butcher them at dinner. (39 words)
Although arguments have been made that the chroniclers' accounts of this tactic were meant to excuse the flight of the Norman troops from battle, this is unlikely as the earlier flight was not glossed over. (35 words)
Example sentences (20)
Later Iberian Christian chroniclers call her Al Mutamid's daughter, but the Islamic chroniclers are considered more reliable.
What’s also true is that the beauty and the terror can be framed, by sufficiently gifted chroniclers, in a single historical tableau.
As ignorantly as some of them could be, Journalists are not only the chroniclers of history but also the shapers of public opinion.
He may well have been describing both the place and its chroniclers.
Many of the Islamic Invaders, their own secretaries, and Muslim chroniclers themselves are the sources of these numbers.
News of the worst kind for chroniclers of regional life″, 23/11) has highlighted many of the damaging consequences that follow the loss of local newspapers from rural communities.
But medieval chroniclers rarely bothered to record the lives of ordinary peasants unless there was some moral to it.
It was contemporary Indian chroniclers who called this period “the anarchy”, due to the waves of invasion and civil war that shook Mughal power and allowed a host of regional actors – of which the company was merely one – to gain ascendancy.
Like their mother, they roles as chroniclers of their own ordeal, at times providing some of the movie’s most charming, poignant sights and sounds.
For nearly three decades, Kurtz worked at The Washington Post and emerged in the 1990s as one of the nation’s foremost media chroniclers.
According to one of the chroniclers of the time, he was given the epithet of the "Red" when in 981 he invited the most troublesome of the Roman families to a banquet, and proceeded to butcher them at dinner.
According to participating chroniclers, the expedition could have been destroyed at this point, but the Chickasaw let them go.
According to some chroniclers, Hildebrand moved to Cluny after Gregory's death, which occurred in 1048; his declaration to have become a monk at Cluny must not be taken literally.
According to some chroniclers, Mieszko II expelled his two brothers from the country.
According to the chroniclers, the Abbasid caliph al-Mansur once asked his courtiers who deserved the exalted title of "Falcon of the Quraysh " (Saqr Quraish, foremost of the Prophet's tribe).
Accounts of the incident vary considerably between the various chroniclers and the exact location of the incident has never been confirmed; the losses may have involved only a few of his pack-horses.
Although arguments have been made that the chroniclers' accounts of this tactic were meant to excuse the flight of the Norman troops from battle, this is unlikely as the earlier flight was not glossed over.
Although some chroniclers felt that John had been humiliated by the sequence of events, there was little public reaction.
As historians and archaeologists have developed more resources to challenge the one-sided descriptions of the chroniclers, a more balanced picture of the Norsemen has become apparent.
Brown, James I, p. 73 Writing nearly a century later both the chroniclers John Mair and Hector Boece relied extensively on Bower for their own narratives.
Common combinations with chroniclers
These word pairs occur most frequently in English texts:
- the chroniclers 10×
- contemporary chroniclers 10×
- chroniclers of 6×
- medieval chroniclers 6×
- some chroniclers 4×
- chroniclers in 3×
- chroniclers who 3×
- chroniclers the 3×
- chroniclers and 3×
- chroniclers were 3×