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abstracter
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abstracter
abstracter (æbˈstræktə(r)) [f. abstract v. + -er1.] One who abstracts, separates, or makes an abstract.1681 T. Manningham Disc. 58 A very judicious abstracter would find it a hard task to be anything copious. 1732 Berkeley Minute Philos. (1732) II. 126 An Abstracter or Refiner shall so analyse the m...
Oxford English Dictionary
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William D. Metz
He was active in publishing numerous articles on Rhode Island history, served as editor of Phi Alpha Theta's journal, The Historian, and was an abstracter
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abstractor
abˈstractor [a. L. abstractor, n. of agent f. abstract-us: see abstract.] = abstracter. (Analogically the more regular form.) One who makes abstracts; spec. as the title of a grade of clerks in the Civil Service. Also attrib. The office of abstractor arose from the requirements of Section 6 of the B...
Oxford English Dictionary
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John Korsmo
An attorney, real estate title abstracter and title insurance agent, Mr.
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Dave Strickler
employed as a reference librarian at the University of Southern California, a library automation specialist in Provo, Utah and Emeryville, California, an abstracter
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Grammaticalization
described bleaching as "the partial effacement of a morpheme's semantic features, the stripping away of some of its precise content so it can be used in an abstracter
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Shrewsbury and Chester Railway
Now the LNWR viewed the S&CR as an abstracter of business: with the Shrewsbury and Birmingham Railway it would compete with the LNWR for traffic between
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