[f. ETHNOGRAPH-Y (or Gr. ἔθνο-ς nation + -γραφ-ος writer) + -ER1.] One who treats descriptively of the races of mankind; one who is versed in the science of ethnography.

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1854.  H. Miller, Sch. & Schm., x. (1857), 202. An evidence, the ethnographer might perhaps say, of its purely Celtic origin.

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1865.  Tylor, Early Hist. Man., viii. 202. The Ethnographer, who has studied the stone implements of Europe.

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1884.  A. M. Fairbairn, in Congregationalist, April, 280. The greatest ethnographers, that is, the men who have most extensively studied the customs, the manners, the beliefs of men.

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