[fem., in L. form, of TRANSLATOR: see -TRIX.] = prec.
1791. Monthly Rev., Jan., 43. The first of these [Elegies], which seems to have cost our ingenious and elegant translatrix [Miss Brooke] more trouble than any of the other compositions.
1892. Nation (N. Y.), 18 Aug., 133/1. The translatrix [Emily James Smith] knows her Greek well enough to do thisknows it better than some of her masculine rivals.
1902. Speaker, 4 Oct., 19/1. Is it the translatrix or Gregorovius himself who is guilty of [the mistake]?