Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun One who, or that which, rearranges.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

rearrange +‎ -er

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Examples

  • Oooh, ooh better yet, use the molecular rearranger to transform the shield into a GUN!

    Captain America Returns! | Major Spoilers - Comic Book Reviews and News 2009

  • Â As always, my advice is to vote for the guys with the matter-rearranger on board…

    Review: Justice League of America #36 | Major Spoilers - Comic Book Reviews and News 2009

  • (Soundbite of song, "Mighty Rearranger") Mr. PLANT: (Singing) Mighty rearranger, oh, mighty rearranger, oh … KAHN: Today Robert Plant is a youthful 58.

    Robert Plant: Starting Over After Led Zeppelin 2007

  • (Soundbite of song, "Mighty Rearranger") Mr. PLANT: (Singing) Mighty rearranger, oh, mighty rearranger, oh … KAHN: Today Robert Plant is a youthful 58.

    Robert Plant: Starting Over After Led Zeppelin 2007

  • While Adam did make songs his own, Kris is known as the plaid wearing-guitar playing song rearranger.

    EW.com: Today's Latest Headlines Michael Slezak 2010

  • While Adam did make songs his own, Kris is known as the plaid wearing-guitar playing song rearranger.

    EW.com: Today's Latest Headlines 2010

  • Okay, now listen, listen; what if he takes Ultron’s molecular rearranger so that he can transform the Shield in ARMOR?

    Captain America Returns! | Major Spoilers - Comic Book Reviews and News 2009

  • Stupid spell check doesn’t think that “rearranger” is a word, but if it’s in OHMU, then it’s a word.

    Archive 2006-01-01 David Campbell 2006

  • More to the point—because it is closer to Veblen’s own approach—he did not see that the machine, that wholesale rearranger of life, would change the nature of the entrepreneurial function just as much as it would alter the thought processes of the workman, and that the businessman himself would be forced into a more bureaucratic mold by virtue of his duties as a manager of a vast, ongoing machine.

    The Worldly Philosophers Robert L. Heilbroner 1999

  • More to the point—because it is closer to Veblen’s own approach—he did not see that the machine, that wholesale rearranger of life, would change the nature of the entrepreneurial function just as much as it would alter the thought processes of the workman, and that the businessman himself would be forced into a more bureaucratic mold by virtue of his duties as a manager of a vast, ongoing machine.

    The Worldly Philosophers Robert L. Heilbroner 1999

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