Crossword-Solution: LINGUIST 8 letters, 20 clues 🏆 scrabble score: 9

Dictionary

Word Word Type Definition
Linguist n. A master of the use of language; a talker.
Linguist n. A person skilled in languages.

We have 20 clues for the answer “LINGUIST”

Clue Answers
Person who has a way with words? 1 answer
person skilled in foreign languages 1 answer
UN translator, e.g. 1 answer
U.N. worker. 1 answer
Studier of syntax and semantics 1 answer
Person who studies languages 1 answer
One skilled in languages 1 answer
Certain U.N. worker 1 answer
A person who speaks several languages 1 answer
LANGUAGE expert 2 answers
Person who knows several languages 2 answers
neogrammarian 2 answers
neolinguist 2 answers
philologist 3 answers
Translator 3 answers
ONE skilled in language 4 answers
grammarian 4 answers
Lexicographer 6 answers
polyglot 7 answers
A PERSON WHO SPEAKS MORE THAN ONE LANGUAGE 11 answers
✏️ Suggest another clue Know another question for crossword solution "LINGUIST"? Please add your clue to the biggest crossword databank now!
Kind of apple
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E
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A
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T
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E
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R
Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
ETEAR
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
14 +2

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Sentences with LINGUIST (5)

When talking about the jargon there is therefore no convenient way to distinguish what a *linguist* would call hackers' jargon --- the formal vocabulary they learn from textbooks, technical papers, and manuals.
The Jargon File, Version 2.9.10, 01 Jul 1992 Various 1992
Whereby it appears that he was born of a race of statesmen, and had a Lord Chancellor for his father, and a mother who was “distinguished both as a linguist and a theologian: she corresponded in Greek with Bishop Jewell, and translated his _Apologia_ from the Latin so correctly that neither he nor Archbishop Parker could suggest a single alteration.” It is the atmosphere we are reared in that determines how our inclinations and aspirations shall tend.
What Is Man? And Other Stories Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens) 1993
They were carefully examined, and showed that he was a keen student of international politics, an indefatigable gossip, a remarkable linguist, and an untiring letter writer.
The Return of Sherlock Holmes Arthur Conan Doyle 1994
Could a linguist, could a grammarian, could even a mathematician have seen what she did, have witnessed their appearance together, and heard their history of it, without feeling that circumstances had been at work to make them peculiarly interesting to each other?—How much more must an imaginist, like herself, be on fire with speculation and foresight!—especially with such a groundwork of anticipation as her mind had already made.
Emma Jane Austen 1994
They were carefully examined, and showed that he was a keen student of international politics, an indefatigable gossip, a remarkable linguist, and an untiring letter-writer.
The Return of Sherlock Holmes Arthur Conan Doyle 2008

Quotes with LINGUIST (3)

The difficulty of learning the dead languages does not arise from any superior abstruseness in the languages themselves, but in their being dead, and the pronunciation entirely lost. It would be the same thing with any other language when it becomes dead. The best Greek linguist that now exists does not understand Greek so well as a Grecian plowman did, or a Grecian milkmaid; and the same for the Latin, compared with a plowman or a milkmaid of the Romans; and with respect to …
Thomas Paine The Age of Reason
All writers are demonic dreamers. Writing is an act of sharing experiences and offering of an individualistic perspective of our private attitudes pertaining to whatever topics of thought intrigues the author. Writing is a twitchy art, which attempts to employ linguist building blocks handed-down from past generations. Writers’ word choices form a structure of conjoined sentences when overlaid with the lingua of modern culture. Writers attempt to emulate in concrete form the …
Kilroy J. Oldster Dead Toad Scrolls
The job of the linguist, like that of the biologist or the botanist, is not to tell us how nature should behave, or what its creations should look like, but to describe those creations in all their messy glory and try to figure out what they can teach us about life, the world, and, especially in the case of linguistics, the workings of the human mind.
Arika Okrent In the Land of Invented Languages: Esperanto Rock Stars, Klingon Poets, Loglan Lovers, and the Mad Dreamers Who Tried to Build a Perfect Language
Where this answer appears

Appears in: Newsday, NYT, WSJ.

Used 5 times in crossword archives (1961–2015).