What is another word for beholders?

Pronunciation: [bɪhˈə͡ʊldəz] (IPA)

The word "beholders" refers to someone who observes or perceives something. However, there are several synonyms for the word that can be used in different contexts. For example, the word "spectator" refers to someone who watches a performance or an event. "Viewer" is another alternative that indicates someone who sees an object or a picture. "Observer" is a general term that refers to someone who notices or watches something with attention. "Onlooker" is also a substitute that describes someone who is present and observes a situation without participating. Finally, "witness" is a term that refers to someone who sees an event or a crime.

What are the hypernyms for Beholders?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Beholders

By some potent alchemy the sweat of Hodge's brow has become condensed into that sparkling diamond, which is disclosed when the glove is drawn off in the shops, to the admiration of all beholders.
"Hodge and His Masters"
Richard Jefferies
The terror of having one's face shot half away and being an object of revolt and horror to all beholders for the rest of life.
"The Rough Road"
William John Locke
The great entertainments in the palaces where Charles Edward had so often danced, the admired of all beholders, in his boyhood, were not for the Count and Countess of Albany.
"The Countess of Albany"
Violet Paget (AKA Vernon Lee)

Famous quotes with Beholders

  • These funerals always appear to me the more indecent in a populous city, from the total indifference of the beholders, and the perfect unconcern with which they are beheld.
    Karl Philipp Moritz
  • Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own.
    Jonathan Swift
  • In each of the cathedral churches there was a bishop, or an archbishop of fools, elected; and in the churches immediately dependent upon the papal see a pope of fools. These mock pontiffs had usually a proper suit of ecclesiastics who attended upon them, and assisted at the divine service, most of them attired in ridiculous dresses resembling pantomimical players and buffoons; they were accompanied by large crowds of the laity, some being disguised with masks of a monstrous fashion, and others having their faces smutted; in one instance to frighten the beholders, and in the other to excite their laughter: and some, again, assuming the habits of females, practised all the wanton airs of the loosest and most abandoned of the sex. During the divine service this motley crowd were not contended with singing of indecent songs in the choir, but some of them ate, and drank, and played at dice upon the altar, by the side of the priest who celebrated the mass. After the service they put filth into the censers, and ran about the church, leaping, dancing, laughing, singing, breaking obscene jests, and exposing themselves in the most unseemly attitudes with shameless impudence. Another part of these ridiculous ceremonies was, to shave the precentor of fools upon a stage erected before the church, in the presence of the populace; and during the operation, he amused them with lewd and vulgar discourses, accompanied by actions equally reprehensible. The bishop, or the pope of fools, performed the divine service habited in the pontifical garments, and gave his benediction to the people before they quitted the church. He was afterwards seated in an open carriage, and drawn about to the different parts of the town, attended by a large train of ecclesiastics and laymen promiscuously mingled together; and many of the most profligate of the latter assumed clerical habits in order to give their impious fooleries the greater effect; they had also with them carts filled with ordure, which they threw occasionally upon the populace assembled to see the procession. These spectacles were always exhibited at Christmas-time, or near to it, but not confined to one particular day.
    Joseph Strutt
  • Mere bashfulness without merit is awkward; and merit without modesty, insolent. But modest merit has a double claim to acceptance, and generally meets with as many patrons as beholders.
    Joseph Addison
  • Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own.
    Jonathan Swift

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