ordinator

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See also: ordinatör

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Latin

Noun[edit]

ordinator (plural ordinators)

  1. One who ordains or establishes; a director.
    • 1629, Thomas Adams, Sermons:
      if nature and her ordinator, God, deny health, how unvaluable are their riches, how unavailable their projects!
    • 1905 January, Ossian H. Lang, “The Educational Outlook”, in The Forum, volume 36, number 3, page 435:
      The plan which has proved most satisfactory is something like this: One teacher, the class ordinator, is made responsible for the general discipline and progress of a class.
    • 1916, Thomas Alexander Lacey, Nature, Miracle and Sin, page 58:
      God is ordinator no less than creator; if he is naturarum bonarum creator, he is also malarum uoluntatum ordinator; if human wills make a bad use of good things , he in turn makes a good use even of evil wills.
    • 1917 January 13, R. Andersen, “Short History of the Danish Reformation”, in The Living Church, volume 56, page 361:
      This is the only synod in America to have an ordinator, and it is here that the Lutheran resembles the Episcopalian. But the ordinator is not consecrated—that is not a Danish custom—his office resembling that of the superintendents in Germany.
    • 2011, Jack Vance, The Killing Machine:
      During the social hour, he went to the office of the assistant ordinator, a weasel-faced man wearing the dark blue Interchange uniform as if it were a privilege.

Related terms[edit]

Anagrams[edit]

Latin[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From ōrdinō +‎ -tor.

Pronunciation[edit]

Noun[edit]

ōrdinātor m (genitive ōrdinātōris); third declension

  1. orderer, regulator, arranger
  2. ordainer

Declension[edit]

Third-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative ōrdinātor ōrdinātōrēs
Genitive ōrdinātōris ōrdinātōrum
Dative ōrdinātōrī ōrdinātōribus
Accusative ōrdinātōrem ōrdinātōrēs
Ablative ōrdinātōre ōrdinātōribus
Vocative ōrdinātor ōrdinātōrēs

Descendants[edit]

Verb[edit]

ōrdinātor

  1. second/third-person singular future passive imperative of ōrdinō

References[edit]

Romanian[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Borrowed from French ordinateur. Equivalent to ordina +‎ -tor.

Noun[edit]

ordinator n (plural ordinatoare)

  1. computer

Declension[edit]