¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Mitigators
1. mitigator [n] - See also: mitigator
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mitigators
Literary usage of Mitigators
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Oliver Optic's Magazine by Oliver Optic (1875)
"I took the alligator out of the desk, and put on the thickest mitigators, ...
The next day, at the same hour, I put on thinner mitigators, so that the teeth ..."
2. Hazards Research and Applications Workshop (1996): Proceedings edited by David Butler (1999)
"... businesses survive and recover He compared failure and recovery rates between
mitigators and non-mitigators Simple precautions (having a first aid kit, ..."
3. The Contemporary Review (1878)
"It is idle to dispute whether Thomas was or was not " a kindred spirit to our
modern reformers and mitigators of the criminal code. ..."
4. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1823)
"But we, in the meantime, shall take the liberty to reverse the situation of the
parties, and placing the mitigators themselves at the bar, see what answer ..."
5. Report of the Secretary for Agriculture by United States Dept. of Agriculture (1866)
"As mitigators of the severity of radiation, the introduction of shelter trellises
is highly promising. But in more northern districts, where this method may ..."
6. The English Review (1846)
"... the world;"—or to that of Dr. Giles, who endeavours to recommend his hero as
a kindred spirit to modern philanthropists and mitigators of the criminal ..."
7. Works by Herbert Spencer (1898)
"... gradually diminishing, must eventually occupy but small spaces in life; while
the emotions which prompted them, ceasing to be the mitigators of misery, ..."
8. Women's Suffrage: The Reform Against Nature by Horace Bushnell (1869)
"They are no more mitigators now, but instigators rather, sweltering in the same
fierce heats and commotions, only more tempestuously ..."