Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun One who remunerates.

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • noun a person who pays money for something

Etymologies

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Examples

  • Jones was formally honored by the King, presented with a gold-hilted sword, engraved, Jones happily recorded, “with these extremely flattering words: Vindicati Maris Ludovicus XVI remunerator Strenua Vindici reward from Louis XVI to the valiant avenger of the rights of the sea.”

    John Paul Jones 9781451603996 2003

  • Jones was formally honored by the King, presented with a gold-hilted sword, engraved, Jones happily recorded, “with these extremely flattering words: Vindicati Maris Ludovicus XVI remunerator Strenua Vindici reward from Louis XVI to the valiant avenger of the rights of the sea.”

    John Paul Jones 9781451603996 2003

  • Lastly, this commandment conveys the obligation to dissent from, and reject, every superstition and every error, requiring us to preserve pure and intemerate the adoration due to the Supreme Being, who, in this sense, is represented in this text as jealously watching over human actions, and a not indifferent spectator of good or evil; therefore a sure punisher of the guilty, and an eternal remunerator of him who faithfully adheres to His law.

    A Guide for the Religious Instruction of Jewish Youth Isaac Samuele Reggio

  • _ You have no right, sir, to be the patron and remunerator of inhospitality.

    Imaginary Conversations and Poems A Selection Walter Savage Landor 1819

  • If you crapper intend the correct bourgeois than a beachfront remunerator is possible.

    xml's Blinklist.com 2008

  • Is your cashflow broad sufficiency or your choice commercialism bounteous enough, that modify if you had to evict your remunerator for non-payment and it took you 2 months to modify it with another cash-paying customer, you'd ease become discover ahead?

    xml's Blinklist.com 2008

  • Does yours existence a remunerator or a possessor with depleted justness exhibit that loans and added methods of direction cash-shortages are not meant for you.

    xml's Blinklist.com 2008

  • So I may say, that the excess of your fatherly affection drives me into such a strait, that I shall be forced to live and die ungrateful; unless that crime be redressed by the sentence of the Stoics, who say that there are three parts in a benefit, the one of the giver, the other of the receiver, the third of the remunerator; and that the receiver rewards the giver when he freely receives the benefit and always remembers it; as, on the contrary, that man is most ungrateful who despises and forgets a benefit.

    Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel 2002

  • So I may say, that the excess of your fatherly affection drives me into such a strait, that I shall be forced to live and die ungrateful; unless that crime be redressed by the sentence of the Stoics, who say that there are three parts in a benefit, the one of the giver, the other of the receiver, the third of the remunerator; and that the receiver rewards the giver when he freely receives the benefit and always remembers it; as, on the contrary, that man is most ungrateful who despises and forgets a benefit.

    Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel 2002

  • So I may say, that the excess of your fatherly affection drives me into such a strait, that I shall be forced to live and die ungrateful; unless that crime be redressed by the sentence of the Stoics, who say that there are three parts in a benefit, the one of the giver, the other of the receiver, the third of the remunerator; and that the receiver rewards the giver when he freely receives the benefit and always remembers it; as, on the contrary, that man is most ungrateful who despises and forgets a benefit.

    Gargantua and Pantagruel, Illustrated, Book 4 Fran��ois Rabelais 1518

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