noun

definition

A person who works with others towards a common goal.

synonyms

Examples of collaborators in a Sentence

It was socially significant that he and his political collaborators were drawn of the stock of newly emancipated peasants.

Among the Reformers were, of course, Martin Luther and most of his German collaborators; the Swiss Zwingli, Bullinger, Farel and Calvin; the English Latimer, John Bradford, John Jewel; the Scot John Knox.

Among his collaborators were James Ussher, John Lightfoot and Edward Pococke, Edmund Castell, Abraham Wheelocke and Patrick Young.

The work of Father Anselme, his collaborators and successors, is even more important for the history of France than is Dugdale's Baronage of England for the history of England.

After years of tentative approaches on Schiller's part, years in which that poet concealed even from himself his desire for a friendly understanding with Goethe, the favourable moment arrived; it was in June 1794, when Schiller was seeking collaborators for his new periodical Die Horen; and his invitation addressed to Goethe was the beginning of a friendship which continued unbroken until the younger poet's death.

The other chief collaborators were Pechmeja, Holbach, Paulze, the farmergeneral of taxes, the Abbe Martin, and Alexandre Deleyre.

In choosing his collaborators his principle was never to select nobles or ecclesiastics, but persons of inferior birth.

Etienne Dumont, Claviere, Antoine Adrien Lamourette and Etienne Salomon Reybaz were but a few of the most distinguished of his collaborators.

Miffing (1802-1853) and Gottfried Thomasius (1802-1875) being his collaborators.

By further decomposition peptones yield peptides, a certain number of which have been synthesized by Emil Fischer and his collaborators.

Of modern histories written in Magyar the most imposing is the History of the Hungarian Nation (to vols., Budapest, 1898), issued to commemorate the celebration of the millennium of the foundation of the monarchy, by Sandor Szilagyi and numerous collaborators.

The Asolani attempted to perform the whole duties of editing, and to reserve all its honours for themselves, dispensing with the service of competent collaborators.

Synopsis Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker is remembered as an eminent Victorian botanist and traveler, and one of Charles Darwin's closest collaborators.

Already collaborators are sending us their positive comments about this service.

The Pilot project involved several industrial collaborators and a leading university in manufacturing systems engineering.

Collaborators were judged to be traitors to France rather than French fascists.

Collaborators We are specifically interested in the role of Gli3 zinc finger transcription factor during patterning of the cerebral cortex.

The partisans had been utterly ruthless with any collaborators they had caught.

With its international collaborators, his team has used supercomputers to create the first virtual organ, the virtual heart.

These deposits, in addition to having a high commercial importance, present certain problems which have received much attention, more particularly at the hands of van't Hoff and his collaborators, whose results are embodied in his Zur Bildung der ozeanischen Salzablagerungen, vol.

Work is carried out on both thermoplastic and thermosetting polymer composites, most research activities have direct links with industrial partners and international collaborators.

Collaborators from 14 centers attended these meetings to hear an update on progress.

A wrap-up meeting of the principal collaborators and training partners was held in Brussels with representatives of the European Commission in late March 2004.

He took other men's labour as his due, and impressed their words, of which he had suggested the underlying ideas, with the stamp of his own individuality; his collaborators themselves did not complain - they were but too glad to be of help in the great work of controlling and forwarding the French Revolution through its greatest thinker and orator.

Jaures, in addition to his daily journalistic activity, published Les preuves; affaire Dreyfus (1900); Action socialiste (1899); Etudes socialistes (1902), and, with other collaborators, Histoire socialiste (1901), &c.

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