arbiter
英 [ˈɑː.bɪ.tər]
美 [ˈɑːr.bə.t̬ɚ]
- n. [法] 仲裁者;裁决人
- n. (Arbiter)人名;(英)阿比特
arbiter 仲裁ar同前缀ad-, 去,往。词根bain,同词根ven, 走,-t,过去分词格,见acrobat。指走来充当裁判的第三个人。
- arbiter (n.)
- late 14c., from Old French arbitre or directly from Latin arbiter "one who goes somewhere (as witness or judge)," in classical Latin used of spectators and eye-witnesses, in law, "he who hears and decides a case, a judge, umpire, mediator;" from ad- "to" (see ad-) + baetere "to come, go." The specific sense of "one chosen by two disputing parties to decide the matter" is from 1540s. The earliest form of the word attested in English is the fem. noun arbitress (mid-14c.) "a woman who settles disputes."
- 1. He was the ultimate arbiter on both theological and political matters.
- 他在神学和政治事务上都是最终的仲裁人。
- 2. The law is the final arbiter of what is considered obscene.
- 何谓猥亵最终由法律裁决。
- 3. Andrew was the arbiter of the disagreement.
- 安德鲁是那场纠纷的仲裁人.
- 4. He acted as arbiter.
- 他充任仲裁人.
- 5. He acted as an arbiter.
- 他充当调停人.