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conciliator

[ US /kənˈsɪɫiˌeɪtɝ/ ]
[ UK /kənsˈɪlɪˌe‍ɪtɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone who tries to bring peace

How To Use conciliator In A Sentence

  • But he has also sought to strike a conciliatory note, gaining the respect of many. Times, Sunday Times
  • For discussions allow passion to subside; and to persuade alienated neighbors, or at least one of them, to listen to the voice of a conciliator, is a step in the direction of peace. Albert Gobat - Nobel Lecture
  • But he has also sought to strike a conciliatory note, gaining the respect of many. Times, Sunday Times
  • Republicans offered little in the way of conciliatory gestures. Times, Sunday Times
  • Perhaps he was too amiable, too diffident and conciliatory in his approach. The American Nation: A History of the United States to 1877
  • As I have said, it was meant in a conciliatory and friendly way in the context in which I have used the word throughout my life and as set out earlier in this Statement. The full FA report from the Luis Suárez Patrice Evra racism case
  • But it appears that Britain will now play a conciliatory role at the summit over the fiscal pact. Times, Sunday Times
  • On Friday he struck a more conciliatory tone. Times, Sunday Times
  • Immediately after, the court of London announced to the other courts of Europe, that if France entered Holland with armed force, she would consider it as an act of hostility, and declare war against her; sending Mr. Grenville here, at the same time, to make what she called a conciliatory proposition. Memoir, Correspondence, And Miscellanies, From The Papers Of Thomas Jefferson, Volume 2
  • This contrasts with the conciliatory approach of China, South Korea and Russia.
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