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Definition of Alienator
1. Noun. An unpleasant person who causes friendly people to become indifferent or unfriendly or hostile.
Definition of Alienator
1. n. One who alienates.
Definition of Alienator
1. Noun. A person who alienates ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Alienator
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Alienator
Literary usage of Alienator
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Model Tax Convention on Income and on Capital by OECD Staff, OECD. Committee on Fiscal Affairs, Oecd (2000)
"Such gains are, therefore, taxable only in the State of which the alienator is
a resident. 31. If shares are sold by a shareholder to the issuing company in ..."
2. Model Tax Convention on Income and on Capitalby Oecd, OECD. Committee on Fiscal Affairs, (Paris) Organisation for Economic Co-ope, OECD Staff, Organisation for Economic Co-operation, Development. by Oecd, OECD. Committee on Fiscal Affairs, (Paris) Organisation for Economic Co-ope, OECD Staff, Organisation for Economic Co-operation, Development. (2000)
"The provision applies^ only to property which was owned by the alienator, either
wholly or jointly with another person. Under the laws of some countries, ..."
3. Arminius: a history of the German people and of their legal and by Thomas Smith (1861)
"He into whose breast the straw has been cast, must afterwards remain in the house
of the alienator, taking with him three guests (witnesses), ..."
4. The Continental Legal History Series by Association of American Law Schools (1915)
"This would have been to dispossess the alienator and one had no more right to do
this than to free his property of a real servitude to which it was subject. ..."
5. The Publications of the Selden Society by Selden Society (1906)
"The Hereford rule treats of the case in which a citizen alleges an alienation or
devise of land to be invalid, on the ground that the alienator or testator ..."
6. Contributions to Latin Lexicography by Henry Nettleship (1889)
"alienator, one who makes over to another ... alienator, ac venditor (Paucker); Cod.
lust. 4. 54. 9. Alienatus, -us, name of a malady among animals, ..."
7. A Compendium of the Modern Roman Law: Founded Upon the Treatises of Puchta by Frederick James Tomkins, Henry Diedrich Jencken, Karl Adolph von Vangerow (1870)
"The alienator remains Heir. administration, however, is conducted by a Curator
... But even after Alienation the alienator remains the Heir, and the recent ..."