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the heralds
noun
A messenger, especially one bringing important news.
Exact(60)
In a disaster this huge, television reporters are the heralds of the fund-raising effort.
From the period of the visitations the heralds compiled huge collections of family history and pedigrees.
Characteristically, therefore, given this situation, the heralds of Arab nationalism (as reflected in literature) were Christians.
In the late 14th century the authority of the heralds was expanded.
Even the heralds, whose job it was to record aristocratic pedigrees, were not above error.
These are the heralds of the painting's modern existence as global pop-icon.
The Heralds of the New Voice become the Apologists for the Old Bore.
There are 18th-century documents from small Italian towns in which Renaissance putti find themselves the heralds of Jewish weddings.
In England the fees earned by the heralds belong to the College of Arms; in Scotland they belong to the government's treasury.
Braque was one of the demigods of modern art, like Picasso, Rouault and Leger, still revered as one of the heralds of modernity.
When the crown ceased to grant arms directly, its powers were delegated to the heralds as commissioners, with authority to issue letters patent.
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