What's the difference between objector and objicient?

Objector


Definition:

  • (n.) One who objects; one who offers objections to a proposition or measure.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) • This article was amended on 10 September 2013 to correct the number of conscientious objectors in the first world war from 6,000 to 16,000 and to clarify that conscientious objectors were not executed.
  • (2) Yet some members of the church who profess desire to adhere most strictly to the teachings of Christ are the most vehement objectors to behavior that most resembles what his might have been.
  • (3) Iain Duncan Smith and Chris Grayling breached all those, absurdly calling objectors 'job snobs'.
  • (4) How many online objectors read CS Lewis’s Narnia books in their formative years?
  • (5) A government figure insisted that local people would still be consulted, but that a few objectors would not be able to stand in the way, according to the Times.
  • (6) A cabinet reshuffle predicted for Thursday could see him remove objectors but also potentially leave him struggling to govern effectively.
  • (7) Some of the objectors are ideologically opposed to what they see as the privatisation of state education; others are worried more practically about an overflow of children who won't get into the new academy, fearing it will create a sink school nearby.
  • (8) The episode is said to have told against him in 1977 when the incoming President Jimmy Carter nominated him as director of the CIA , but withdrew the nomination when he learned that the Chappaquiddick involvement might prevent his approval by the Senate; his registration as a conscientious objector with his draft board just after the second world war may also have been a factor.
  • (9) A self congratulatory delusional breed of non -conscientious objectors.
  • (10) While some papal experts had concluded that the pope’s meeting with Davis represented an endorsement of her role as a conscientious objector – because she went to jail for five days after refusing to fulfil her duties – the author Michael Sean Winters dismissed those arguments.
  • (11) Even the objectors – and there were, in town, plenty of them; petitions and letter-writing campaigns and a Facebook page organised against what a large number of locals saw initially as a vanity project and, above all, a criminal waste of money – now seem largely won over.
  • (12) You had delays as some are conscientious objectors.
  • (13) And in this seething, darkened bearpit, the night belonged to Campbell and Nevin, not the objectors and whingers off stage, with their agendas and their microphones.
  • (14) Photograph: Mamoun Fansa Fansa, who moved to Germany in 1967 as a conscientious objector and was then unable to return home to Syria for the next two decades, has assembled a team of architects, town planners, engineers and fellow archaeologists, who together have formed the initiative Strategies for the Reconstruction of Aleppo.
  • (15) Krugman, his blog and comments on Twitter, have become the focal point for objectors worldwide.
  • (16) In 1977, he joined the Daily Express, where he toiled away as a worthy if unglamorous reporter until Richard Desmond's arrival propelled him – a conscientious objector to pornography – into the arms of the Mail on Sunday and a weekly column where he could be as unlike his brother as humanly possible.
  • (17) Conscientous objectors at a peace demonstration at Dartmoor, Devon in 1917.
  • (18) The US, New Zealand and other countries have sought a sanctuary in the pristine waters of the Ross Sea for the past decade, and there are hopes that previous objectors Russia and Ukraine will agree to a new, smaller proposal when the nations that regulate Antarctic fishing meet next week in Hobart, Australia.
  • (19) From them it goes to the abolitionists and peace crusaders of the years before the Civil War, the anarchists and pacifists at the beginning of this century, the sit-down strikers of the 1930s and the conscientious objectors of two world wars.
  • (20) Of the non-objectors, 55% wished their permission to be asked first, and 92% wished to be informed of the result, i.e.

Objicient


Definition:

  • (n.) One who makes objection; an objector.

Example Sentences:

Words possibly related to "objector"

Words possibly related to "objicient"