Cicerones [noun]

Definition of Cicerones:

mentor

Synonyms of Cicerones:


Opposite/Antonyms of Cicerones:

-


Sentence/Example of Cicerones:

A young Englishman, a wine merchant, accompanied us in our journey through this sultry valley and was our cicerone.

What I needed, when I arrived, was an honest and disinterested cicerone to put me on my guard against people and things.

Their cicerone was a very tall staff-officer who looked slightly worried by his cosmopolitan responsibilities.

An intelligent Jew was our cicerone, and read us some Hebrew out of the precious old book of the law.

M. Piron, the cicerone and the very humble servant of M. Dupin, multiplied his formul of adulation.

Last evening Mr. Robert Cox came to tea, to be introduced to me as my cicerone through the lions of Edinburgh.

Pierre was a good cicerone; he pointed out near the edge of the sea the spot where the first of the returning exiles had landed.

He never admired himself more than in the rle of cicerone to a young and trusting maid.

Senor Perkins, who had acted as cicerone to the party, pointed out these various mutations with no change from his usual optimism.

Do you see my favorite, your cicerone, and the bread and roast fowls that your slave has brought him in that leathern wallet?