adjudicator

noun
/əˈd͡ʒuː.dɪ.keɪ.tə/UK/əˈd͡ʒu.dɪˌkeɪ.tɚ/CA/əˈd͡ʒʉː.dɪ.kæɪ.tə/

Etymology

From adjudicate + -or.

  1. borrowed from adiudico
  2. formed as adjudicator — “adjudicate + -or

Definitions

  1. One who adjudicates.

    • Rimmer ducked his body low into his chair, so just his head remained above the table top, and peered past the backs of the examinees in front of him, waiting for the adjudicator to make his move.
    • The State Department has hired hundreds of new passport adjudicators, put employees to work around the clock and opened a new processing facility in Arkansas but has still been unable to meet the demand [for the issuance of new passports].
    • But in the neighboring DeKalb County, groups of four adjudicators work together – one Republican, one Democrat, two independents – to vote on whether a ballot is OK, and that its intent can be ascertained.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for adjudicator. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA