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Contemporaries   /kəntˈɛmpərˌɛriz/   Listen
Contemporaries

noun
1.
All the people living at the same time or of approximately the same age.  Synonyms: coevals, generation.



Contemporary

noun
(pl. contemporaries)
1.
A person of nearly the same age as another.  Synonym: coeval.



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"Contemporaries" Quotes from Famous Books



... religious and ethical knowledge that it is intimately connected with character: religious and moral teaching of the highest kind is in a peculiar degree inseparable from the personality of the teacher. Jesus impressed his contemporaries, and he has impressed successive ages as having not only set before man the highest religious and moral ideal, but as having in a unique manner realized that ideal in his own life. Even the word 'example' {156} does not fully express the impression which he made on his followers, or do justice ...
— Philosophy and Religion - Six Lectures Delivered at Cambridge • Hastings Rashdall

... become the poet of the people, writing in the popular patois, and for public solemnities, which remind one of those of the Middle Ages and of Greece; thus he finds himself to be, in short, more than any of our contemporaries, of the School of Horace, of Theocritus, or of Gray, and all the brilliant geniuses who have endeavoured by study to bring each of their works ...
— Jasmin: Barber, Poet, Philanthropist • Samuel Smiles

... complained to his sympathetic contemporaries, "he's a damn stuck-up Willie. He said, 'Are the crowd here gentlemen?' and I said, 'No, they're boys,' and he said age didn't matter, and I said, 'Who said it did?' Let him get fresh with me, the ...
— Flappers and Philosophers • F. Scott Fitzgerald

... many conspiracies in Florence and entered into many scandalous practices, for the sake of attaining state and lordship." G. Villani, 1. viii. c. 96. The character of Corso is forcibly drawn by another of his contemporaries Dino Compagni. 1. iii., Muratori, Rer. Ital. ...
— The Divine Comedy • Dante

... he had recognized in her one of the rare women, who by their intelligence and, as it were, instinctive appreciation of genius can compensate to a great incompris like Balzac for the lack of recognition on the part of his contemporaries; one of those women near whom, thanks to tactful treatment, a depressed man will regain confidence in himself and courage ...
— Women in the Life of Balzac • Juanita Helm Floyd


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