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addresser
(redirected from addressor)

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ad·dress·er also ad·dres·sor  (-drsr)
n.
One, such as a person or a machine, that addresses.


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Though a transparency of language is assumed (that is, speech uttered by addressors is taken literally and not figuratively), no comprehensively mimetic relationship between English academic discourse and the discipline of English studies in South Africa is assumed: what objects academics feel compelled to analyse, the repertoire of tools used in analysis, and what topics become current at any one moment, all come to characterise part of the practice of the discipline at that time.
The harm done to him imposes a duty upon a civil spectator--who is also a party to "the civil contract of photography"--to restore the position of the photograph's addressor as well as its meaning.
A name designates some thing by bringing that thing into the space/time of the present place, the "I-here-now," such that the name Rome, for example, situates the referent, addressor, and addressee in relation to an "as-if right here.
 
 
 
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