51Թ

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wonder-worker

[ wuhn-der-wur-ker ]

noun

  1. a worker or performer of wonders or marvels.


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Other 51Թ Forms

  • ɴDzd-ɴǰiԲ adjective
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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of wonder-worker1

First recorded in 1590–1600
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

According to Merriam-Webster, “fakir” can mean Hindu ascetic or wonder-worker — or con man.

From

It doesn’t hurt that Oscar wonder-worker Harvey Weinstein of The Weinstein Company is supervising the campaign; he also has the real-life Lee working the media.

From

Nor, as other commentators have said, are we helped to see why this particular charismatic wonder-worker rather than others attracted the extraordinary claim that he was the vehicle of unconditional creative power and the enabler of a new kind of worship – the paradox that the creed of 325 enshrined, in words Christians still use.

From

In the beginning, Jesus of Nazareth, a charismatic wonder-worker whose profile has some parallels with fairly well-known Jewish saints and sages of his period, proclaims a radically simplified version of the law of Moses and the religion of the Hebrew prophets, with a special stress on the claims of those who think of themselves as having no claims – the destitute, the marginal, the failed.

From

But they are only taught of the wonders, not of the Wonder-worker.

From

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wonderworkwondrous