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English
Etymology
From berate + -er.
Noun
berater (plural beraters)
- One who berates someone or something.
1852 April 23, “From the Journal of Commerce. A Chance for the Abolitionists.”, in W[illia]m Lloyd Garrison, editor, The Liberator, volume XXII, number 17 (whole 1111), Boston, Mass.: J B Yerrinton & Son, , page 65, column 1:But a very few slaves have been, or are likely to be, surrendered under this law, and a mere pittance on the part of the Abolitionists and Free Soilers would be sufficient to redeem them. Come, then, ye noisy declaimers and defamers, ye haters and beraters of slavery and the Fugitive Slave Law, and shell out your cash for the redemption of Preston, over whom you have made so many lamentations and shed so many crocodile tears.
1957, Bernard Rosenberg, David Manning White, “Divertissement”, in Mass Culture: The Popular Arts in America, Glencoe, Ill.: The Free Press & The Falcon’s Wing Press, →LCCN, page 390:David Riesman distinguishes two opposing attitudes toward popular music, a majority one which accepts the adult picture of youth somewhat uncritically, and a minority one in which there are certain socially rebellious themes. The majority group form the audience for the disc jockeys, Hit Parade, etc. The minority group are the real jazz devotees, readers of Downbeat and Metronome, and the beraters of sentimental “commercial” music.
1971, O. Glenn Stahl, “The Growing Business of Government”, in Public Personnel Administration, 6th edition, Nwe York, N.Y.: Harper & Row, →LCCN, part I (The Modern Public Service), footnote 9, page 14:A most illuminating, popular description of bureaucracy is found in John D. Weaver, The Great Experiment, An Intimate View of the Everyday Workings of the Federal Government, Boston, Little, Brown, 1965. Contains real-life vignettes of the fascinating work going on; a good antidote for persistent beraters of public servants and their accomplishments.