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Alice
What's the difference between "approver(n.)", "proponent(n.)", "advocate(n.)"?
Jun 27, 2021 9:19 AM
Answers · 1
If you are advanced enough in English to be worrying about these 3 words, then I think you are very capable of looking up the definitions in a dictionary and working it out yourself. Though, seeing as you asked...
A proponent is a person that proposes something or makes a proposition, an advocate argues in favour of something (possibly publicly). Though both words might be used to refer to someone that is in support of something.
An approver is a person that exercises the right to allow something to go ahead.
These are big words, with maybe more than one clear definition, so I would look them up yourself, along with finding examples of clever people using them. They sound like words lawyers might use a little more frequently than your everyday folk.
June 28, 2021
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Alice
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English
Learning Language
English
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