arbiter

[ ahr-bi-ter ]
/ ˈɑr bɪ tər /

noun

a person empowered to decide matters at issue; judge; umpire.
a person who has the sole or absolute power of judging or determining.

Origin of arbiter

1350–1400; Middle English arbitour, arbitre < Anglo-French, Old French < Latin arbiter

OTHER WORDS FROM arbiter

su·per·ar·bi·ter, noun

Definition for arbiter (2 of 2)

arbiter elegantiae
[ ahr-bi-ter ey-le-gahn-tee-ahy; English ahr-bi-ter el-uh-gan-shee-ee ]
/ ˈɑr bɪˌtɛr ˌeɪ lɛˈgɑn tiˌaɪ; English ˈɑr bɪ tər ˌɛl əˈgæn ʃiˌi /

noun Latin.

a judge of elegance or matters of taste.
Also ar·bi·ter e·le·gan·ti·a·rum [ahr-bi-ter ey-le-gahn-tee-ah-roo m; English ahr-bi-ter el-uh-gan-shee-air-uh m] /ˈɑr bɪˌtɛr ˌeɪ lɛˌgɑn tiˈɑ rʊm; English ˈɑr bɪ tər ˌɛl əˌgæn ʃiˈɛər əm/.

Example sentences from the Web for arbiter

British Dictionary definitions for arbiter

arbiter
/ (ˈɑːbɪtə) /

noun

a person empowered to judge in a dispute; referee; arbitrator
a person having complete control of something

Word Origin for arbiter

C15: from Latin, of obscure origin