imitator

noun

Etymology

From French imitateur, derived from Latin imitātor, equivalent to imitate + -or.

  1. derived from imitātor
  2. derived from imitateur

Definitions

  1. A person who imitates or apes another.

    • Chalk it up to the government’s revelations in recent years about UFOs, or maybe just the pendulum swinging back, again, after “The X-Files” inspired a host of imitators in the 1990s.
    • Other far-right sites would gravitate to Epik. Among the first to announce its migration in early 2019 was BitChute, a YouTube imitator that had been blocked by PayPal.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for imitator. 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