How to Use supplicant in a Sentence

supplicant

noun
  • Quality news providers are the supplicants and the serfs.
    Jim Rutenberg, New York Times, 9 July 2017
  • The tenant was a supplicant lucky to get a few crumbs from the leasing table.
    Joshua Stein, Forbes, 23 June 2021
  • Javier Wong runs a culinary speakeasy: no sign and the door is locked, so supplicants must knock loudly.
    David Holahan, courant.com, 15 Aug. 2017
  • Where their paws fell, a new mythology; where their whiskers touched, a new breed of supplicants.
    Hanya Yanagihara Kyoko Hamada, New York Times, 10 May 2023
  • Few supplicants [patients] in the temple are well enough to do anything but lie on their hard beds.
    Gabriel Winant, The New Republic, 23 May 2018
  • Just as the word of God has come down, the word of supplicants goes up to God, more efficaciously than any other time.
    Bryant Rousseau, New York Times, 5 June 2016
  • One of the best strategies to feel more normal about networking is to approach people as a peer, rather than a supplicant.
    Dorie Clark, WSJ, 17 Sep. 2021
  • Supplicants have been flocking to the nondescript North Sider to sit at the eight-seat sushi bar run by chef Katsu Imamura since 1988.
    Condé Nast Traveler, 28 Apr. 2017
  • There is almost always a wait, with or without a reservation, and there is almost always a long line of supplicants against the wall.
    New York Times, 29 Oct. 2019
  • This is why the wizard acts as an exorcist, never a supplicant, King explained.
    Kent Russell, Harper’s Magazine , 25 May 2022
  • Another supplicant wanted a piece of the lottery winnings to get her driveway paved.
    Marc Fisher, Anchorage Daily News, 19 June 2021
  • A group of supplicants all desperately trying to hold on to their spots on the show by effusively praising Trump -- each one trying to take it a step further than the last.
    James Hohmann, Washington Post, 13 June 2017
  • As grain prices increased, the parishes became overwhelmed with supplicants.
    Nathan Heller, The New Yorker, 24 Mar. 2014
  • A queue of supplicants was positioned strategically outside his office door, and ran down the hall.
    Omar Waraich, The Atlantic, 28 July 2017
  • The fierce competition for juicy jobs places each separate firm in the position of supplicant, service provider, and client pleaser.
    Curbed, 17 Mar. 2022
  • And during his visit, he was schooled on respecting China’s interests and played supplicant to Xi.
    David Pierson, BostonGlobe.com, 20 June 2023
  • Its efficacy, too, depends upon the purity of the heart, the goodness and sincerity of the supplicant.
    Rabbi Avi Weiss, sun-sentinel.com, 15 Mar. 2021
  • Many contracts treat the buyer as a worthless supplicant, lucky to have the opportunity to acquire the seller’s property.
    Joshua Stein, Forbes, 17 Sep. 2021
  • All these words strike me as vaguely offensive except for mendicant and supplicant.
    Stephen Miller, WSJ, 11 Oct. 2021
  • Placebo effect Besides praying to deities for career success, supplicants are seeking luck in winning the lottery.
    Laura He, CNN, 9 June 2023
  • The next day should be spent visiting the Corycian Cave, an obligatory stop for ancient supplicants after encountering the Oracle.
    Liz Alderman, New York Times, 9 July 2019
  • Supplicants sometimes apply to specific gods for a specific requirement but in general they are appealed to as a group.
    Jane Alexiadis, The Mercury News, 1 June 2017
  • It’s of a piece with government business being conducted on Trump’s golf courses and presidential supplicants trying to curry favor by using the services of Trump hotels.
    Jeet Heer, The New Republic, 9 July 2018
  • Snuffboxes and miniature portraits were often exchanged between lovers and supplicants.
    Gaile Robinson, star-telegram, 30 Aug. 2017
  • Five centuries later, the Baal Shem Tov, founder of the Hasidic movement, compiled a rubric for interrupted prayer, breaking down the mind games that throw a supplicant off—from idle trivialities to impure impulses and personal struggles.
    Allan Ripp, WSJ, 20 May 2021
  • Instead, Christie ended up a supplicant, slaving for Trump’s transition team before finally getting murked by a Jared Kushner bent on settling family business.
    Jason Linkins, The New Republic, 29 Apr. 2023
  • The wealth accumulated by William Andrews Clark had always attracted supplicants, but the hospital's executives, doctors, and nurses would mount a full-scale 20-year campaign to persuade Huguette to hand over large chunks of her copper inheritance.
    Meryl Gordon, Town & Country, 21 May 2014
  • In Afghanistan, America is necessarily a supplicant now.
    Joel Mathis, The Week, 24 Aug. 2021
  • But both mendicant and supplicant have a religious connotation.
    Stephen Miller, WSJ, 11 Oct. 2021
  • Synonyms for beggar include hobo, pauper, tramp, vagrant, derelict, mendicant, bum, supplicant, deadbeat, borrower.
    Stephen Miller, WSJ, 11 Oct. 2021

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'supplicant.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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