originatoro‧rig‧i‧na‧tor /əˈrɪdʒəneɪtə $ -ər/ noun [countable] - Alberti was the originator of the violin's design even though Stradivari made it famous.
- Stokely Carmichael was probably the originator of the term "black power."
- Communications services transfer the information from the originator to the recipient.
- He excelled in music and is one of the originators of Gregorian chants and the liturgical sequences.
- However, not every idea originator has the know-how, the drive, and the aggressiveness to do so.
- It contains a major element of truth, even if it is not precisely the truth which its originators intended.
- The presidential decision failed to satisfy either the originators of the law or its main critics.
someone who invents something► inventor someone who has invented something, or whose job is to invent things, especially machines: · Franklin was a scientist, an inventor, and a statesman.· Marconi was the inventor of radio.· The patent lists six inventors who worked on the system.
► creator the writer, artist, or designer who first produced a well-known story, character, fashion etc: creator of: · Walt Disney, the creator of Mickey Mouse· Diaghilev is considered by many to be the creator of the first modern dance company.
► originator the person who first invented something, especially an idea: originator of: · Stokely Carmichael was probably the originator of the term "black power."· Alberti was the originator of the violin's design even though Stradivari made it famous.
► the father of something the man who first invented a new way of thinking or a new area of study, or who first tried new methods, practices etc: · Sigmund Freud, the father of psychoanalysis, was born in 1856.· Lowe was the real father of modern computing and a very important figure in IBM's ranks.
nounoriginoriginaloriginalityoriginatoradjectiveoriginal ≠ unoriginalverboriginateadverboriginally