[a. L. accommodātor, n. of agent f. accommodāre: see ACCOMMODATE.] He who, or that which, accommodates (in various senses of the vb.).
c. 1630. W. Robinson, in Lett. Sci. Men (1841), I. 11. At the most he is but the accommodator, (an easy trifle,) not the inventor.
1662. Fuller, Worthies (1840), III. 125. These [Nails] are the accommodators generally to unite solid bodies.
1762. Warburton, Doct. of Grace, II. 331 (T.). Mahomet wanted the refinement of our modern accommodators.