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innovator

[ US /ˈɪnəˌveɪtɝ, ˈɪnoʊˌveɪtɝ/ ]
[ UK /ˈɪnəvˌe‍ɪtɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone who helps to open up a new line of research or technology or art

How To Use innovator In A Sentence

  • His tone tended to be hard and harsh and lacked the varied coloration of the bop innovator Charlie Parker.
  • One early morning at an elementary school bus stop, I gaily waved at the visible faces of our future leaders and innovators, children whose dreams and innocence were yet unscathed by disappointment or grim reality.
  • This weekend, two orchestras will honor the men who made mambo: at Rose Hall, one outstanding Latin American bassist salutes another as Carlos Henriquez leads the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra in the music of the Cuban composer and innovator Israel Cachao Lopez 1918-2008. The Jazz Scene: Rhythm Kings and the Chairman of the Board
  • Something of a rough diamond, Violent was always an innovator in batting technique. Lord Bonkers' Favourite XI: 4. Violent Bonham-Carter
  • Only the opening sequence could claim to be genuinely innovatory.
  • Let's go do it because we're a species of explorers and inventors and innovators.
  • Hu is just the kind of emigre Beijing has been eager to lure back to bolster an economy growing rapidly but short of talented managers and innovators. Fore, right!
  • And neither of those terms of respect are exclusive - in other words, there can be more than one innovator, and indeed, there are.
  • The rocket battery, an innovatory air defence tool, had only recently been installed. Times, Sunday Times
  • The equation was simple: he had recently turned 31, had a young family and new job to consider and an innovatory and forward-looking national coach was about to take over the Scotland reins.
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