debunker
English
Etymology
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /diːˈbʌŋkə(ɹ)/, /diːˈbʊŋkə/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Noun
debunker (plural debunkers)
- Someone who debunks.
- 2000, John Rothchild, The Bear Book: Survive and Profit in Ferocious Markets, page 19:
- Interest Rate Observer, and a debunker of U.S. stocks since the Dow was at 2,000, has appeared on Rukeyser's TV show, where he gets bear-baited: "World's going to hell again, eh, Jim?"
- 2002 December 8, Scott Veale, “Word for Word/The Rendlesham File; Let There Be Lights: Britons Get One Less Thing to Worry About”, in The New York Times[1]:
- Still, something strange was afoot in Rendlesham, and even if the file is unlikely to satisfy either ufologists or debunkers, it suggests that the truth is still out there.
- 2005 December 25, Michael Sokolove, “The Debunker”, in The New York Times Magazine[2]:
- Philip J. Klass belonged to the small and somewhat peculiar class of individuals known as debunkers.
Translations
Someone who debunks
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Anagrams
Italian
Etymology
Unadapted borrowing from English debunker.
Noun
debunker m (invariable)