[a. L. accommodātor, n. of agent f. accommodāre: see ACCOMMODATE.] He who, or that which, accommodates (in various senses of the vb.).

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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.

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1662.  Fuller, Worthies (1840), III. 125. These [Nails] are the accommodators generally to unite solid bodies.

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1762.  Warburton, Doct. of Grace, II. 331 (T.). Mahomet wanted the refinement of our modern accommodators.

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