Instigador in english

Instigator

pronunciation: ɪnstəgeɪtɜr part of speech: noun
In gestures

instigador = gadfly ; instigator ; provocateur ; perpetrator ; abettor [abetter] ; rabble rouser ; rabble-rousing ; firebrand. 

Example: Scilken has deservedly achieved a reputation as the consumer advocate and gadfly of the profession during the 12 years of his directorship of the Orange Public Library in Orange, New Jersey.Example: Technological change has long been the instigator of significant shifts in curriculum emphasis.Example: The article is entitled 'Tomorrow's libraries: more than a telephone jack, less than a complete revolution; perspectives of a provocateur'.Example: This article looks at the case histories of 10 computer frauds together with a study of the profiles of the perpetrators.Example: Thereafter, it became clear to the city police that the hotel owners acted hand-in-glove with the abettors of prostitution.Example: To their contemporaries, the two men represented polar opposites: Hitler, a rabble rouser preaching a doctrine of blood and race, and Pius, a man of contemplation offering the Church's grace to all.Example: After arrival in Sydney, it took only three years for Norton's reputation as a rabble-rousing republican to be established.Example: He might poke fun at politicians, but he isn't known as a liberal firebrand.

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» cómplices e instigadoresaiders and abettors .

Example: As the government has rightly conceded in these cases, the persons supervised by the kingpin cannot be punished as aiders and abettors.

Instigador synonyms

firebrand in spanish: marca de fuego, pronunciation: faɪɜrbrænd part of speech: noun initiator in spanish: iniciador, pronunciation: ɪnɪʃieɪtɜr part of speech: noun instigant in spanish: instigante, pronunciation: ɪnstɪgənt part of speech: noun inciter in spanish: incitador, pronunciation: ɪnsətɜr part of speech: noun provoker in spanish: provocador, pronunciation: prʌvəkɜr part of speech: noun
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