operator
Americannoun
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a person who operates a machine, apparatus, or the like.
a telegraph operator.
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a person who operates a telephone switchboard, especially for a telephone company.
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a person who manages a working or industrial establishment, enterprise, or system.
the operators of a mine.
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a person who trades in securities, especially speculatively or on a large scale.
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a person who performs a surgical operation; a surgeon.
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Mathematics.
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a symbol for expressing a mathematical operation.
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a function, especially one transforming a function, set, etc., into another.
a differential operator.
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Informal.
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a person who accomplishes goals or purposes by devious means; faker; fraud.
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a person who is adroit at overcoming, avoiding, or evading difficulties, regulations, or restrictions.
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a person who is extremely successful with or smoothly persuasive to potential sexual or romantic partners.
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Genetics. a segment of DNA that interacts with a regulatory molecule, preventing transcription of the adjacent region.
noun
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a person who operates a machine, instrument, etc, esp, a person who makes connections on a telephone switchboard or at an exchange
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a person who owns or operates an industrial or commercial establishment
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a speculator, esp one who operates on currency or stock markets
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informal a person who manipulates affairs and other people
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maths any symbol, term, letter, etc, used to indicate or express a specific operation or process, such as Δ (the differential operator)
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Mathematics A function, especially one from a set to itself, such as differentiation of a differentiable function or rotation of a vector. In quantum mechanics, measurable quantities of a physical system, such as position and momentum, are related to unique operators applied to the wave equation describing the system.
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A logical operator.
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Genetics A segment of chromosomal DNA that regulates the activity of the structural genes of an operon by interacting with a specific repressor.
Other Word Forms
- preoperator noun
- self-operator noun
Etymology
Origin of operator
First recorded in 1590–1600; from Late Latin, equivalent to operā(rī) “to work, effect” ( operate ) + Latin -tor noun suffix ( -tor )
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
The blocks of five letters, we figure, make the text easier for telegraph operators to send and receive.
From Literature
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He’s a Stanford-polished operator who wants the chair and wants to keep it.
From MarketWatch
But, Carr explained, the camera operator then said that he had been "just joking, just teasing".
From BBC
National Rail said to expect major delays until at least 15:00 and Avanti West Coast is advising passengers to use tickets with other operators.
From BBC
But so far actual use cases remain scarce and fully automated robots are still a rare sight, with most impressive displays -- including Todo's -- relying on remote operators to control the robot's movements.
From Barron's
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.