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The word "regulator" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to refer to a person or thing that regulates or controls something. For example: "The government appointed a new financial regulator to monitor the banking sector."
Dictionary
regulator
noun
A device that controls or limits something.
synonyms
Exact(60)
Charity regulation and its regulator may remain in a "state of crisis", but improvements are visible on the horizon.
Smith's move from the regulator to a supermarket he had been regulating in October 2012 was approved by the prime minister after guidance from the advisory committee on business appointments (ACOBA), on condition that Smith did not lobby civil servants or ministers on behalf of Tesco for two years.
"Extending Ofcom's powers to enable it to take pre-emptive action would move it from its current position as a post-transmission regulator into the role of censor".
This is the latest crisis to hit the hospital, which was put in special measures by the health regulator Monitor last November after data inaccuracies in cancer treatment targets meant it breached its licence to provide health services.
Ofcom's decision, coming a day after the regulator admitted for the first time that it was "very unlikely" that all the local TV stations would succeed, casts further uncertainty over the future of loss-making London Live.
Coverage of the story was then resumed by the stations "some days later", according to an inquiry by media regulator Ofcom first revealed in Private Eye.
Previously best known for her successful complaint to the media regulator against writer AA Gill for a homophobic jibe, the TV presenter has become a national treasure in the space of 12 months.
Media regulator Ofcom has launched an investigation into whether the BBC took due care of the welfare of the child because he was identifiable and his remarks could cause a backlash.
This is the latest crisis to hit Colchester hospital, which was placed in special measures by the health regulator Monitor last November after data inaccuracies in cancer treatment targets meant the hospital had breached its licence to provide health services.
Secondly, the broadcasters and regulator have come to an unsatisfactory conclusion because they refuse to recognise the multinational nature of the British state.
In an extension of an existing arrangement, institutions which intend to charge fees higher than £6,000 a year must draw up a new agreement with the government regulator, the Office for Fair Access (OFFA).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com