attender
nounEtymology
From Middle English attender, attendere, equivalent to attend + -er.
- inherited from attender
Definitions
An attendee
An attendee; one who attends a course, meeting, school, etc.
- She was a very constant attender of First-day and week-day meetings, at the meeting places she belonged to
- The great distance that some youth travel...is bound to play its part in the case of the borderline student who becomes an infrequent attender and finally drops out of school.
An attendant
An attendant; one who attends to someone or something.
- Sri C. Rajabather was appointed to assist in the office as typist attender from 7-4-41.
The subject
The subject; one who experiences.
- the whole process of ages’-long mentalization, of which our present ability of conceiving “Mind” forms only the culmination, and by no means the constant attender.
- Activity of attention for the sake of knowledge changes only the mind of the attender and is resisted only by the habits, biases, laziness and the like
- The other aspect pertains to the subject’s own subjectivity, those qualities that constitute the subject as the experiencer or attender.
The neighborhood
Derived
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for attender. 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