different between adjudicator vs critic

adjudicator

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /æ.d?u.d??ke?.t??/

Noun

adjudicator (plural adjudicators)

  1. One who adjudicates.
    • 2007, Houston Chronicle, June 8
      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].

Related terms

  • adjudication
  • adjudicatrix

Translations

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critic

English

Alternative forms

  • critick (archaic)

Etymology

Borrowed from Middle French critique, from Latin criticus, from Ancient Greek ???????? (kritikós, of or for judging, able to discern), from ????? (krín?, I judge).

Pronunciation

  • (UK, US) IPA(key): /?k??t.?k/
  • Rhymes: -?t?k

Noun

critic (plural critics)

  1. A person who appraises the works of others.
  2. A specialist in judging works of art.
  3. One who criticizes; a person who finds fault.
    • When an author has many beauties consistent with virtue, piety, and truth, let not little critics exalt themselves, and shower down their ill nature.
  4. An opponent.
  5. Obsolete form of critique (an act of criticism)
  6. Obsolete form of critique (the art of criticism)
    • 1690, John Locke, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, Chapter 21, page 550
      And, perhaps, if they were distinctly weighed, and duly considered, they would afford us another sort of logic and critic, than what we have been hitherto acquainted with.

Derived terms

  • armchair critic
  • criticess

Related terms

Translations

Verb

critic (third-person singular simple present critics, present participle criticking, simple past and past participle criticked)

  1. (obsolete, transitive, intransitive) To criticise.
    • 1607, Antony Brewer (attributed), Lingua, or the Combat of the Five Senses for Superiority
      Nay, if you begin to critic once, we shall never have done.

Anagrams

  • citric

Irish

Etymology

Borrowed from English critique, from French critique, from New Latin critica (critique).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?c???t??c/

Noun

critic f (genitive singular critice, nominative plural criticí)

  1. critique
    Synonym: beachtaíocht
  2. criticism
    Synonym: criticeas, léirmheastóireacht

Declension

Derived terms

Mutation

Further reading

  • "critic" in Foclóir Gaeilge–Béarla, An Gúm, 1977, by Niall Ó Dónaill.
  • Entries containing “critic” in New English-Irish Dictionary by Foras na Gaeilge.

Ladin

Adjective

critic m pl

  1. masculine plural of critich

Romanian

Etymology

Borrowed from French critique and Latin criticus.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?kri.tik/

Noun

critic m (plural critici)

  1. critic

Adjective

critic m or n (feminine singular critic?, masculine plural critici, feminine and neuter plural critice)

  1. critical

Declension

critic From the web:

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