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Definition of Devastator
1. n. One who, or that which, devastates.
Definition of Devastator
1. Noun. one who devastates. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Devastator
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Devastator
Literary usage of Devastator
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of Science, & C (1818)
"... devastator, (the Insect that produces the Cut-worm,) communicated for the
American Journal of Science, &fc. by Mr. JOHN P. BRACE, ..."
2. Revision of the Orthopteran Group Melanolopli Acridiidae with Special by Samuel Hubbard Scudder (1897)
"devastator SERIES. This group is composed of very closely related species, often
difficult to distinguish, in which the male pro/она is quadrate or ..."
3. Nature Biographies: The Lives of Some Every-day Butterflies; Moths by Clarence Moores Weed (1903)
"... A devastator OF FORESTS. IT is comparatively seldom that man has an opportunity
to learn what would happen if, so far as forests and their enemies were ..."
4. The World Beautiful by Lilian Whiting (1898)
"devastator of The interruptions that occur daily and hourly in the lives of busy
people have never been embodied in the Litany as one of those temptations ..."
5. The American Journal of Science, & C (1818)
"... devastator, (the Insect that produces the Cut-worm,) communicated for the
American Journal of Science, &fc. by Mr. JOHN P. BRACE, ..."
6. Revision of the Orthopteran Group Melanolopli Acridiidae with Special by Samuel Hubbard Scudder (1897)
"devastator SERIES. This group is composed of very closely related species, often
difficult to distinguish, in which the male pro/она is quadrate or ..."
7. Nature Biographies: The Lives of Some Every-day Butterflies; Moths by Clarence Moores Weed (1903)
"... A devastator OF FORESTS. IT is comparatively seldom that man has an opportunity
to learn what would happen if, so far as forests and their enemies were ..."
8. The World Beautiful by Lilian Whiting (1898)
"devastator of The interruptions that occur daily and hourly in the lives of busy
people have never been embodied in the Litany as one of those temptations ..."