THAT after an attentive and vigilant perusal of the said work, your Dedicator is humbly of opinion that so many libels, upon your Honourable sex, were never contained in any previously published work, in twelvemo or any other mo.
Thorpe gives a sarcastic description of a typical patron, and amply attests the purely commercial relations ordinarily subsisting between dedicator and dedicatee.
In that preliminary sentence the dedicator habitually 'wisheth' his patron one or more of such blessings as health, long life, happiness, and eternity.
Many other instances of initials figuring in dedications under slightly different circumstances will occur to bibliographers, but all, on examination, point to the existence of a close intimacy between dedicator and dedicatee.
The dedicator signs himself at the bottom of the page 'Your Worships unfained affectionate, W.
Objects appropriate to the dedicator or the cause of his dedication include portraits of the dedicator, such as the statue of Chares (No.
It seems probable that these reliefs are votive, and that in selecting as their subject the victory of Apollo in a musical contest, the dedicator indirectly commemorated his own triumph in a similar exercise of skill.
This seems sufficiently caustic; but hear, how our dedicator proceeds: "Illustrious Holland!
The dedicator has apparently in this place been guilty of a strange misconception.
The dedicator also stamps the work as originating at Lyons; and Frellon, its printer, in a complaint against a Venetian bookseller, who pirated his edition, emphatically describes it as exclusively belonging to France.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "dedicator" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.