Get Free Checker

vindicator

[ US /vɪndəˈkeɪtɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a person who argues to defend or justify some policy or institution
    an apologist for capital punishment

How To Use vindicator In A Sentence

  • The question, therefore, concerning ‘the nature of the atonement’ depends on the question of whether there is in God such an attribute as distributive or vindicatory justice.
  • She is the champion and vindicator only of her own . . . Broke
  • I should have had great difficulty to convince this practical and disinterested admirer and vindicator of liberty, that arrests seldom or never were to be seen in the streets of Edinburgh; and to satisfy her of their justice and necessity would have been as difficult as to convert her to the Protestant faith. Chronicles of the Canongate
  • There are vindicatory stories available to scientists, which they draw on in times of need.
  • But this holiness is the universal perfection of God, which, when exercised in punishing the sins of the creatures, is called vindicatory justice; that is, in relation to its exercise and effects, for in reality the holiness and justice of God are the same, neither of which, considered in itself and absolutely, differs from the divine nature, whence they are frequently used the one for the other. A Dissertation on Divine Justice
  • It is clear," says this "vindicatory" excerpt, "that a conspiracy has been formed to defame the Judge Advocate A belle of the fifties : memoirs of Mrs. Clay, of Alabama, covering social and political life in Washington and the South, 1853-66,
  • His supreme right, dominion, and vindicatory justice are of no account with them. A Dissertation on Divine Justice
  • For the author, she is the “mother of the nation, vindicator of the law, and champion of religion” (15: 29). Martyred mother with seven sons (4MACC): Apocrypha.
  • He has reminded himself that God is his vindicator and deliverer. Fear Not Tommorow, God is Already There
  • But the justice which respects things done is either that of government, or jurisdiction or judgment; and this, again, they affirm to be either remunerative or corrective, but that corrective is either castigatory or vindicatory. A Dissertation on Divine Justice
View all