[
UK
/mˈɒdəɹˌeɪtɐ/
]
[ US /ˈmɑdɝˌeɪtɝ/ ]
[ US /ˈmɑdɝˌeɪtɝ/ ]
NOUN
- in the Presbyterian church, the officer who presides over a synod or general assembly
- someone who mediates disputes and attempts to avoid violence
- someone who presides over a forum or debate
- any substance used to slow down neutrons in nuclear reactors
How To Use moderator In A Sentence
- On top of this, contracted moderators check marked student work in every subject from every school, every year.
- Because this list is also archived on the Web, members can view for themselves the difference between what was sent to the list and what was approved by the moderators.
- From the time the moderator gives the word, let's say it's "sesquipedalian," until your progeny very slowly spells it correctly, doesn't it seem a lifetime? Undefined
- The moderator can then select the questions to be asked and call on the individuals who submitted them to actually pose the questions to the candidates.
- Two disciplinary hearings, chaired by an outside moderator, were held yesterday and the others are due to be completed soon.
- But before he could reach the door he heard the steady beat of the life moderator, and at the sound of this he ran to the window.
- The moderator of the Church of Scotland has added his voice to the chorus of concern.
- As a self-confessed occasional HYS commenter on the BBC, it seems even their 'moderators' are tarnished by the bias and the 'house rules' are taken from their 'little labour book of creating wooly, abusable, and loopholed and rules and laws'. OPEN THREAD
- Can you tell me if Moderator WolfDawgNY at Cleveland. com is bald, paunched, wears seersucker shorts, a “I love NY” t shirt that is 2 sizes too small, wears knee high black socks and beige mallwalkers? Community policing: a business somebody should start (hint, hint) « BuzzMachine
- The heart of any nuclear reactor is the core, which contains the fuel, a moderator, and control rods.