abhorrer

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abhorrer
abhorrer (æbˈhɔːrə(r)) [f. abhor v. + -er1.] 1. One who abhors.1611 Cotgr., Haineur, a hater, loather, detester, abhorrer. c 1660 Jer. Taylor Artif. Hands 134 Those things, whereof they sometimes were great abhorrers. 1705 Hickeringill Priest-Craft ii. viii. 89 A Protestant Succession, of which the ... Oxford English Dictionary
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Sir William Portman, 6th Baronet
He was a strong ‘abhorrer’ during the exclusion crisis in Charles II's reign, and while attending parliament in May 1685 he received a mysterious warning wikipedia.org
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abominator
abominator (əˈbɒmɪneɪtə(r)) [f. abominate v. + -or, as if a. L. *abōminātor agent noun f. abomināri.] One who abominates or detests; an abhorrer or extreme hater.1816 Scott Old Mort. i. More than one non-juring bishop, whose authority and income were upon as apostolical a scale as the greatest abomi... Oxford English Dictionary
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William Parkyns
Parkyns acquired a good practice, and, inheriting wealth from his father, became prominent in the London as an adherent of the court party, an "abhorrer wikipedia.org
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detester
deˈtester [f. as prec. + -er1.] One who detests; a cordial hater; an abhorrer, abominator.1611 Cotgr., Abhorrant, an abhorrer, detester, loather. 1651 Fuller Abel Rediv. (1867) II. 99 A detester of controversies. 1779 Sheridan Critic i. ii, A detester of visible brickwork. 1863 Sala Capt. Dangerous ... Oxford English Dictionary
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petitioner
petitioner (pɪˈtɪʃənə(r)) [f. petition n. + -er2: cf. pensioner, commissioner, etc., and med.L. petītiōnārius beggar, f. petītiōn-em petition. In earlier use than petition v., but, after the introduction of the latter, naturally viewed as its agent-n. in -er1.] 1. One who presents a petition; one wh... Oxford English Dictionary
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abhor
abhor, v. (æbˈhɔː(r)) Also 5–7 abhorre. [ad. L. abhorrē-re to shrink back in dread, to be far from, to be inconsistent with; f. ab away from + horrē-re, to bristle, to stand with, or as, hair on end, to stand aghast, to shudder with fright, etc. Cf. Fr. abhorrer which may have given the trans. sense... Oxford English Dictionary
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