repertor

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Latin repertor, from repertus (found), from reperīre (to find), from re- (again, back) + parere (to bear, to get), from Proto-Indo-European *per- (to bring forth), + -or (-er: forming agent nouns). Influenced by Middle French repertour (inventor, discoverer). Cognate with repertible, repertitious.

Noun

repertor (plural repertors)

  1. (rare, obsolete) A discoverer.
    • 1650, Thomas Fuller, A Pisgah-Sight of Palestine and the Confines Thereof, page 31:
      Let others dispute whether Anah was the Inventour, or onely the Repertour of Mules.

References

Anagrams

Latin

Etymology

From reperiō (I find, discover, invent) +‎ -tor (-er, forming agent nouns), q.v.

Pronunciation

Noun

repertor m (genitive repertōris, feminine repertrīx); third declension

  1. One who finds something, particularly:
    1. An originator, a deviser.
    2. A discoverer.
    3. An inventor.
      Synonym: inventor
  2. (figuratively) An author.

Declension

Third-declension noun.

singular plural
nominative repertor repertōrēs
genitive repertōris repertōrum
dative repertōrī repertōribus
accusative repertōrem repertōrēs
ablative repertōre repertōribus
vocative repertor repertōrēs

Descendants

  • English: repertor
  • French: repertour

References

Romanian

Noun

repertor n (plural repertorii)

  1. alternative form of repertoriu

Declension

Declension of repertor
singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative-accusative repertor repertorul repertorii repertoriile
genitive-dative repertor repertorului repertorii repertoriilor
vocative repertorule repertoriilor