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Definition of Personator
1. n. One who personates.
Definition of Personator
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Personator
Literary usage of Personator
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American and English Encyclopedia of Law by David Shephard Garland, John Houston Merrill, Charles Frederic Williams, Thomas Johnson Michie (1889)
"... inducing another to personate a voter has been held to be complete upon the
personator tendering a ballot or "voting paper," although it was rejected. ..."
2. The Philosophy of Language; Or, Language as an Exact Science: Subjectively by David Henry Cruttenden (1870)
"NOTE I. That, which is called the Antecedent of the Personator, ... I is a pronoun;
because, in this sentence, it has the use or office of a personator. ..."
3. The Secret Doctrine: The Synthesis of Science, Religion, and Philosophy by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (1917)
"Then the author shows " that the Spirit Jehovah is a personator " on its own
admission. It acknowledged to Moses " that it had appeared to the patriarchs as ..."
4. Navaho Legends by Washington Matthews (1897)
"The personator wears a collar of fox-skin, a number of rich necklaces of shell,
... Diagram of the bow-symbol on the left leg of the personator of Na- ..."
5. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1910)
"Clad in prescribed paraphernalia, the personator of the sky-god, wearing the mask
of the sun, enters the pueblo at sunrise from the east, and proceeding to ..."
6. The Sacred Books of China: The Texts of Confucianism by Confucius, James Legge (1885)
"He conducted everything according to the rules of ceremony, thereby giving
prominent exhibition to them, and displaying them to the august personator :—such ..."