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pleader

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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English

Etymology

Partly from Middle English pleder, pledere, equivalent to plead + -er; and partly from Middle English pledour, plaidour, from Anglo-Norman plaidur, pledour, Old French plaidëor, pledëor.

Pronunciation

Noun

pleader (plural pleaders)

  1. (law) a person who pleads in court; an advocate [from 13th c.]
    • 1889, Rudyard Kipling, “The Education of Otis Yeere”, in Under the Deodars, Boston: The Greenock Press, published 1899, page 30:
      “My District's worked by some man at Darjiling, on the strength of a native pleader's false reports. Oh, it's a heavenly place!
    • 1924, EM Forster, A Passage to India, Penguin, published 2005, page 25:
      ‘Soon after I came out I asked one of the pleaders to have a smoke with me – only a cigarette, mind.’
    • 1954, Plato, translated by Hugh Tredennick, “Socrates on Trial: The Apology”, in The Last Days of Socrates (Penguin Classics), Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin Books, →OCLC, page 20:
      That is the first duty of the juryman, just as it is the pleader's duty to speak the truth.
  2. (generally) someone who pleads or implores [from 16th c.]

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