inquisitors in English

noun
1
a person making an inquiry, especially one seen to be excessively harsh or searching.
the professional inquisitors of the press
noun
    interrogator

Use "inquisitors" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "inquisitors" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "inquisitors", or refer to the context using the word "inquisitors" in the English Dictionary.

1. Galileo facing his inquisitors

2. Watch out, you signalers, inquisitors, Criminalizers.

3. Blankly definition, without expression or understanding: She stared Blankly at her inquisitors

4. The prime minister found himself arraigned before the media inquisitors.

5. 18 Or shun his requests and risk facing his fearsome Inquisitors or even excommunication?

6. 9 The prime minister found himself arraigned before the media inquisitors.

7. Callo is a member of the VKP's Information Analysis Unit—Inquisitors

8. Or shun his requests and risk facing his fearsome Inquisitors or even excommunication?

9. True Christianity has never fostered vengeful, intolerant inquisitors, such as Tomás de Torquemada, or hateful warmongers, such as the papal promoters of the Crusades.

10. Some reckon its failure to unearth masses of new information is down to a mix of mendacious reticence on the part of key witnesses and the pusillanimity of their inquisitors.

11. Today's World Census Report The Most Devout in Bridei World Census Inquisitors conducted rigorous one-on-one interviews probing the depth of citizens' beliefs in order to determine which nations were the most devout.

12. In March 1273, Pope Gregory X formulated the following rules: relapsed Jews, as well as Christians who abjured their faith in favor of "the Jewish superstition", were to be treated by the Inquisitors as heretics.

13. States categorically that “without Anthropophagists, anthropologists would find themselves in much the same position as the inquisitors of the Middle Ages, who quickly exhausted the supply of mortal heretics and therefore had to conjure up supernatural ones lest …

14. For although a continuation of the Bullary has just been published at Rome, containing several decrees of this congregation, there is not one that announces a fulfilment of this illusory promise, -- a promise imagined by a correspondent to French newspapers, but never given by the inquisitors themselves.