ar·bi·ter /ˈɑrbətɚ/
仲裁人,裁決者,公斷人
arbiter
仲裁程序
arbiter
仲裁器
Ar·bi·ter n.
1. A person appointed, or chosen, by parties to determine a controversy between them.
Note: ☞ In modern usage, arbitrator is the technical word.
2. Any person who has the power of judging and determining, or ordaining, without control; one whose power of deciding and governing is not limited.
For Jove is arbiter of both to man. --Cowper.
Syn: -- Arbitrator; umpire; director; referee; controller; ruler; governor.
Ar·bi·ter, v. t. To act as arbiter between. [Obs.]
◄ ►
arbiter
n 1: someone with the power to settle matters at will; "she was
the final arbiter on all matters of fashion" [syn: supreme
authority]
2: someone chosen to judge and decide a disputed issue [syn: arbitrator]