Definition of "delineator"
delineator
noun
plural delineators
One who, or that which, delineates.
Quotations
Each bureucratic entity seems to have two faces in its operation: one is that of a delineator of public interests in its jurisdiction, and the other is that of an agent representing the interests of its constituents vis-a-vis the other interests in the bureaucratic coordinating processes: budgetary, administrative, and planning.
1988, Masahiko Aoki, Information, Incentives and Bargaining in the Japanese Economy, page 263
Importantly, flow becomes the breath delineator that allows accurate calculations of all breath parameters.
2013, Sreedhar Nair, Computers in Critical Care and Pulmonary Medicine, page 35
A road safety marker that indicates where traffic should go.
Quotations
On busy highways, use a road sign (speed limit, no passing zone, mile marker), building, scenic attraction, etc. Do not pick a delineator, unless there is a special grouping of them, because they all look the same.
2020, Dennis A. Bjorklund, DUI / DWI Defense: Preventing a Drunk Driving Arrest, page 108
Quotations
Those who have the least idea of painting can easily conceive it was almost impossible for Vande Velde to paint on the open sea during the commotion of such an event; it was therefore necessary he should have recourse to drawing, to obtain the outlines of such objects and positions as he thought proper to delineate. It is from this circumstance that the writer has particularized him as a delineator instead of a painter.
1834, Christianus Johannes Nieuwenhuys, A Review of the Lives and Works of Some of the Most Eminent Painters, page 257
The apparatus for delineation with this insturment consists simply of a moveable brass slide adapted to the horizontal side of the prism, and having a small hole in the middle of it: half of this hole is brought over the edge of the prism through which the image is transmitted to the eye; through the remaining part of the hole the delineator sees at the same time the point of his pencil which he passes over the lines of the image as they appear on his paper.
1811, John Stack, A Short System of Optics, page 160
One who depicts or describes a character.
Quotations
While the article identifies him by reference to his established identity as a performer who objectifies and enacts a Yankee character—"a delineator of New England character” and “a representative 'Yankee' comedian”—it goes on to observe that “his Uncle Josh Weathersby records have made a decided hit,” calling attention to his new medium of performance and thus marking a critical turning point in his career.
2023, Richard Bauman, Patrick Feaster, A Most Valuable Medium, page 108
A device to aid in the delineation of something.
Quotations
The application of the principle of the delineator to such cases was very simple, but it would be difficult and perhaps useless to construct a delineator for a case where four or five wheels were running over the span.
1890, Transactions of the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland - Volume 33, page 74
The ultramicrometer promises to have a variety of uses: as a strain gage to measure the deformation of structural materials, as a differential thermal expansion cell, as a contact-free delineator of surface profiles and contours, and as a means for measuring the diameters of balls and holes.
1967, Technical News Bulletin of the National Bureau of Standards, page 111
The field-emission electron-gun and vector-scan delineator is a direct wafer writing system using an electron beam for the fabrication of the VLSI patterns down to submicrometer dimensions. This delineator was realized by using a newly developed field-emission electron-gun, as described in Sect.2.2.1c.
2013, Yasuo Tarui, VLSI Technology, page 81
Any of various devices that aid a person in copying the outlines of a drawing or object, including the ability to enlarge or shrink the image.
Quotations
Now any one can easily make a delineator, by going to the hardware store and securing a few little screws, as shown in the cut, and then making or securing four little pieces of wood, as shown in the illustration, of about two feet in length.
1905, Benjamin Grant Jefferis, James Lawrence Nichols, The Household Guide, Or, Domestic Cyclopedia
It is related by those who were his fellow pupils that there was no method or regularity in his study, that his hours of attending the galleries were uncertain, and often out of the ordinary time set apart by other artists, and his habit of copying the antiques the quickest, and what they considered the most un-artistlike, as he always employed and instrument called a delineator.
2017, Tom Dunne, James Barry, 1741?806: History Painter
Any of various jobs that involve delineation, especially that of technical details.
Quotations
The beauty of a wood-cut depends on the skill of both the delineator and the engraver; that is to say, if a drawing is cleanly and sharply executed, and then placed in the hands of a competent engraver, the result will be a type which produces an attractive print.
2023, The Coah-Makers' Illustrated Hand-Book, page 357
Quotations
The splendid illustrations were prepared under the direct and personal supervision of Dr. Cunningham, and most excellent artists were employed on this part of the work, all of them showing up as high specimens of the delineator's art, and thoroughly elucidate the text.
1906, Southern Practitioner, page 121
Furthermore, we have purposely and deliberately avoided the obliteration of the natural form of the plants by shadows, and other less necessary things, by which delineators sometimes try to win artistic glory: and we have not allowed the craftsmen so to indulge their whims as to cause the drawing not to correspond accurately to the truth.
1994, Wilfrid Blunt, William Thomas Stearn, The Art of Botanical Illustration, page 51
The delineator, or technical illustrator, converts preliminary or final drawings into pictorial representations, usually perspective constructions in full colour to help others visualize the product, to inform the public, to attract investment, or to promote sales.
2016, Trenton Campbell, Drawing: Materials, Techniques, Styles, and Practice
One who makes architectural drawings.
Quotations
The professional architectural delineator or renderer came into prominence during the second half of the nineteenth century in England and America.
1983, Jules Vallée Guérin, Jules Guerin, Master Delineator: An Exhibition, page 5
One who assembles a complete technical description of wetlands.
Quotations
The issuance of a certification does not create or grant any property interest or right for the certified wetland delineator, nor does it create any rights for an individual relying upon a wetland delineation made by a certified wetaland delineator, but is intended to facilitate the determination of jurisdiction by the Corps.
1995, Federal Register - Volume 60, Issues 47-50, page 13658
(computing) Synonym of delimiter.
Quotations
"gawk" is the GNU version of "awk", a powerful pattern-matching program for processing text files that may be composed of fixed- or variable-length records separated by some delineator ( by default, a newline character).
2003, Ellen Siever, Stephen Figgins, Aaron Weber, Linux in a Nutshell, page 734
(grammar) A suffix used in some Melanesian languages that acts like a determiner and signals that the noun to which it is attached can be used as an agent.
Quotations
Thus certain nouns are inherently potential agents, and any other noun can be turned into one by the suffixation of the delineator.
1995, Mark Durie, “Of Linguistic Evolution and the Notion 'X has a Function Y'”, in Werner Abraham, Talmy Givón, Sandra A. Thompson, editor, Discourse Grammar and Typology, page 292
in fact Scott further includes the class 'Potential Agent' as outranking Human on this scale, defining it as 'any proper noun representing an animate being, any personal pronoun, any inalienably-possessed kin term, or any term to which the delineator has been added. (emphasis ours).
1997, Language and Linguistics in Melanesia, page 80
If the agent and the patient roles are distributed against the animacy hierarchy, the agent is marked by the ergative suffix -ma (when attached to nounds denoting humans)/-wama (when attached to nounds denoting nonhumans) which is called 'delineator' by Scott (1978: 100-103).
2009, Ina Bornkessel, Matthias Schlesewsky, Bernard Comrie, Semantic Role Universals and Argument Linking, page 199