Sentence examples for partaker from inspiring English sources

The word "partaker" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is a noun that means someone who shares in or takes part in something. Example: John is a frequent partaker in the weekly community clean-up events.

Dictionary

partaker

noun

One who partakes of something

  • The joint was passed around the circle, but he was not a partaker, so he waved it away.

Exact(5)

It is also stuck with a stretch limousine full of the biggest sluggers of this generation: Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa, Rafael Palmeiro and that admitted partaker of steroids, Alex Rodriguez, who is 145 homers behind Bonds after a homer Wednesday, to say nothing of Manny Ramirez, who retired last week facing a 100-game suspension for testing positive for banned drugs.

"I'm usually a partaker".

He was also an admittedly freewheeling child of the 1960s, a partaker of psychedelic drugs who had occasional run-ins with the police.

The event drew more than the spontaneous partaker.

The zenith of the beer busts came long ago, Mr. Drake wrote, with a Halloween party in 1986 that featured "live Margaritas" -- made by pouring the tequilla and lime juice directly into the partaker's mouth.

Similar(11)

Today aspiring partakers should consult bloomsdaynyc.com, a compendium of events founded by Enam Hoque in 2008.

While alcohol may impair a person's judgment and so warrants a law that requires partakers to be 21 or older, Ms. Bautista said, cigarettes do not alter a person's state of mind.

2, various times, ballroommarfa.org FORT WORTH That's Gross Nose pickers — partakers in the pastime of mucus excavation — will find like-minded souls at the last weekend of "Grossology: The (Impolite) Science of the Human Body," an exhibition based on the "Grossology" series of children's books by Sylvia Branzei, which are dedicated to the body's sometimes unpleasant functions.

"Tinkering With Speech," an installation by Timothy Polashek, was easy to use and attracted lots of partakers.

Rather, he offers a scientific account of how we are framed, both physically and psychologically, so as ultimately to attain the state in which we are all be "partakers of the divine nature, loving and lovely, holy and happy" (OM 2, prop. 56).

Were the reader to continue beyond the opening propositions of the Observations, he would encounter elements of another, older tradition: references to "perfect self-annihilation, and the pure love of God" (OM 2, prop. 67), and quotations of select biblical passages, especially the promise of becoming "partakers of the divine nature" (2 Pet. 1.4).

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