¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Debunker
1. one that debunks [n -S] - See also: debunks
Lexicographical Neighbors of Debunker
Literary usage of Debunker
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Roswell Report: Fact Vs. Fiction in the New Mexico Desertby Richard L. Weaver by Richard L. Weaver (1997)
"SC: He's our chief debunker. I lean toward him. MC: Rich, have you got, read,
Randle and Schmitt's latest book? RW: Pve not. ..."
2. The Table Talk of John Selden by John Selden, Richard Milward (1892)
"But what is often overlooked is that GBS, regardless of his impertinences, was
never a debunker. His spirit was always too positive for that, his intellect ..."
3. Explorations Into the World of Lewis and Clark: 194 Essays from the Pages of by Robert A. Saindon (2003)
"... native American heroine with Wyoming.1 Little did I know that I would discover
another heroine: a debunker of myths, a crusader for truth in history. ..."
4. How to Make the Most of a Flying Saucer Experience by Professor Solomon (1998)
"In the view of many, it is that provided by Philip Klass, the debunker whom we
met earlier. Klass (in UFO- Abduction: A Dangerous Game [Prometheus Books, ..."
5. Incantation of the Law Against Inept Critics: A Guide to Cryptic Thinking by Morten St. George (2006)
"Meanwhile, in contemporary times, the occult debunker James Randi (author of The
Mask of Nostradamus, New York, 1993, in which he tries to identify factors ..."
6. Unholy Alliance: Priests, Rabbis and Conspirators Within the Temple of Doom by Gyeorgos Ceres Hatonn (1992)
"... I ask that you at America West please make sure our old hard-ball denouncer
and debunker in Florida (who has a talk-radio show in which he asked me to ..."
7. Explorations Into the World of Lewis and Clark V-1 of 3 by Robert A. Saindon (2003)
"Little did 1 know that 1 would discover another heroine: a debunker of myths, a
crusader for truth in history. l. ..."