prizer

prizer

(ˈpraɪzə)
n
a contender for a prize

prizer

(ˈpraɪzə)
n
1. an appraiser or valuer
2. a person with a high regard for something
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
Mentioned in ?
References in periodicals archive ?
ViiV Healthcare is an HIV specialist company in which Glaxo has a majority stake, with Prizer Inc and Shionogi Ltd also shareholders.
Reichel; her sons, Ryan and CJ Reichel; her mother Alice Prizer; and her brother, Robert Seltmann.
William Prizer, among others, has made clear the crucial influence of the cultured intellectual and prolific writer Isabella d'Este as Marchesa of Mantua in shaping the history of music in Mantua (and, arguably, therefore the history of music throughout Italy during the sixteenth century).
Prizer WF (1975) Performance Practices in the Frottola: An Introduction to the Repertory of Early 16th-Century Italian Solo Secular Song with Suggestions for the Use of Instruments on the Other Lines.
Ferer summarizes William Prizer's work and integrates relevant scholarship by Haggh, Taruskin, McFarland, and others into comprehensive overview of music and ceremonial for the order, particularly as it relates to Charles' time as sovereign of it.
The varying styles of the lauda are examined in Prizer, 167-94.
Trinity Real Estate was represented by Prizer and Charles Laginestra while PepsiCo was represented by Gerry Miovski and Sam King of CBRE, Inc.
China lobbies strenuously to prevent world leaders from meeting with the Dalai Lama, the 1989 Nobel Peace Prizer winner and 2006 recipient of the Congressional Gold Medal.
A 2008 conference and the publication of this collection of papers honor Prizer on his retirement from the U.
Each line of the strophe receives its own corresponding musical phrase, the same music serving for each strophe after the first (Chater; Pirrotta 1984;19 Prizer: 228 and 235).