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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
collaborator
noun
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Sansom's work will be continued by his son and longtime collaborator, Chip.
▪ The three convicted collaborators have all been sentenced to death.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ For eight or nine years we were not only collaborators and partners, we were best friends.
▪ Many were scripted by himself, and many edited by his valuable collaborator, Stewart MacAllister.
▪ Over the years collaborator families have become very rich.
▪ Your closest collaborator is left out in the cold.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
collaborator

collaborator \col*lab"o*ra`tor\, n. [L. collaborare to labor together; col- + laborare to labor: cf. F. collaborateur.]

  1. An associate in labor, especially in literary or scientific labor.

  2. one who willingly cooperates with an enemy, especially an enemy nation occupying one's own country.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
collaborator

1802, from French collaborateur, from Latin collaboratus, past participle of collaborare "work with," from com- "with" (see com-) + labore "to work" (see labor (v.)).

Wiktionary
collaborator

n. 1 A person who works with others towards a common goal. 2 A person who cooperates traitorously with an enemy.

WordNet
collaborator
  1. n. someone who assists in a plot [syn: confederate, henchman, partner in crime]

  2. someone who collaborates with an enemy occupying force [syn: collaborationist, quisling]

  3. an associate who works with others toward a common goal; "partners in crime" [syn: cooperator, partner, pardner]

Wikipedia
Collaborator

Collaborator or collaborators may refer to:

  • Collaboration, working with others for a common goal
  • Collaborationism, working with an enemy occupier against one's own country
    • Collaboration with the Axis Powers during World War II
Collaborator (novel)

Collaborator is an alternate history novel by Murray Davies, published as a hardcover on 19 September 2003 and released in paperback in the United Kingdom and the United States in September 2004. The novel is set in a Nazi-occupied Great Britain in 1940 and 1941. It chronicles life during this period primarily through the experiences of Nick Penny, the collaborator of the novel's title.

Collaborator (film)

Collaborator is a comedy-drama film written and directed by Martin Donovan. This film held its world premiere on July 4, 2011 at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival.

Collaborator (album)

Collaborator is the sixth studio album by Djam Karet, released in 1994 by HC Productions.

Usage examples of "collaborator".

Their collaborators and sharp competitors in the great and noble work of planting the gospel and the church in old and neglected fields at the South, and carrying them westward to the continually advancing frontier of population, were to be found in the multiplying army of the Methodist itinerants and local exhorters, whose theology, enjoined upon them by their commission, was the Arminianism of John Wesley.

David, together with a team of collaborators that included Gossec and Marie-Joseph Chenier, to consummate the formal acceptance of the new constitution.

The Inquisition was reinstituted, as were the privileges of the nobility, clergy, and military, and a heartless persecution was unleashed against dissidents, opponents, liberals, Francophiles, and former collaborators in the government of Joseph Bonaparte.

In a letter to the Guggenheim Foundation recommending Pitts for one of their prized fellowships to support his doctoral work, similar to the one Wiener himself had won as a young postdoc two decades before, Wiener sang the praises of his newest pupil and collaborator.

But: given soul, all these material things become its collaborators towards the coherence of the kosmos and of every living being, all the qualities of all the separate objects converging to the purposes of the universe: failing soul in the things of the universe, they could not even exist, much less play their ordered parts.

This point was made by Plesser and me, and was impressively put into practice in subsequent work by Candelas with his collaborators Xenia de la Ossa and Linda Parkes, from the University of Texas, and Paul Green, from the University of Maryland.

By utilizing substantial contributions of the mathematicians Maxim Kontsevich, Yuri Manin, Gang Tian, Jun Li, and Alexander Givental, Yau and his collaborators Bong Lian and Kefeng Liu have finally found a rigorous mathematical proof of the formulas used to count spheres inside Calabi-Yau spaces, thereby solving problems that have puzzled mathematicians for hundreds of years.

Pronzini is known as one of the truly great collaborators and is equally at home co-editing anthologies and co-authoring novels and even short stories.

Unwittingly, Victor Batyrev, a mathematician from the University of Essen, revealed such an idea through a pair of papers released in the spring and summer of 1992, Batyrev had become very interested in mirror symmetry, especially in the wake of the success of Candelas and his collaborators in using it to solve the sphere-counting problem described at the end of Chapter 10.

They are his assistants, his appointed collaborators, who keep and relieve guard, undertaking, in his absence, some observation already in hand, so that no detail may be lost, no incident of the story that unrolls itself sometimes with exasperating slowness beneath the bell-covers of the laboratory or on some bush in the garden.

But during the last couple of decades theoretical progress spearheaded by the late Irish physicist John Bell and the experimental results of Alain Aspect and his collaborators have shown convincingly that Einstein was wrong.

Candelas and his collaborators had successfully conquered with mirror symmetry.

If the Nazi industrialists brought to trial at Nuremburg were guilty of crimes against mankind, then so must be their fellow collaborators in the Ford family, Henry and Edsel Ford.

There, together with various collaborators, he employed a new technique called positional cloning to find the human gene that, if mutated, can give rise to cystic fibrosis.

Perhaps he intended to train a corps of collaborators, Quislings, who would make his authority effective.