[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.
1854. H. Miller, Sch. & Schm., x. (1857), 202. An evidence, the ethnographer might perhaps say, of its purely Celtic origin.
1865. Tylor, Early Hist. Man., viii. 202. The Ethnographer, who has studied the stone implements of Europe.
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.