Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun One who or that which causes; the agent or act by which an effect is produced.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun One who or that which causes.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun someone or something that
causes or produces an effect.
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Through our brief examination of nature, we have seen that the causer is a superior intellectual being who incorporated intelligence, reasoning, planning, design, and order into all that he created.
The Source John Clayton Nils Jansma 2001
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Through our brief examination of nature, we have seen that the causer is a superior intellectual being who incorporated intelligence, reasoning, planning, design, and order into all that he created.
The Source John Clayton Nils Jansma 2001
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(the boulder "doesn't want to" -- thinking of the cave person as a "causer" is a very naive view).
Netvouz - new bookmarks cduret 2010
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Actually, yours are even more illogical since "because" implies a cause implies a causer which you claim does not exist.
Contentment 2009
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The answer to this, he says, is "the causer of my pain".
The Many Lives of Thomas Wyatt by Nicola Shulman - review 2011
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The word is a VERB ... so, must be "courbaturer" (donner, causer, provoquer des courbatures).
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Sri Antakari — A seated goddess, with open mouth, ready to devour — must mean the “death-causer,” fromanta, “end or death.”
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COURBATURER means: donner, causer (être la cause de), provoquer des courbatures. very much used as a "past participle".
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In each situation, I could feel the accident-causer bracing against my possible annoyance, and it was very, very hard to resist the temptation to say things like, "You should've been more careful!"
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Did that guy say “the radio” as a car accident causer?
Augmented Reality will change the way you view the world…or at least the road | Sync Blog 2009
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