One who helps or encourages or incites another.
1 If he was there by appointment with the perpetrator, he is an abettor .
2 He did not want to be an aider or abettor of a crime.
3 Mephistopheles as the abettor of Faust's amorous passion has no need of magic.
4 First I will satisfy myself that I have been no unconscious abettor of treason.
5 Peel was the abettor of all this, and by many deemed the inventor of it.
6 He craved approbation and was helpless without an abettor .
7 She might be accused of having been an abettor in the plot from the first!
8 The champion of order in Russia thereby figured as the abettor of plotters in the Balkans.
9 But Viviette was not altogether a guilty abettor .
10 Who, then, is the abettor of Madame Valois?
11 And fortune sent him such a friend!-Ricard ,Ionian'smost trusted counsellor, the abettor of his plans.
12 His servant Leporello, in every manner the real counterpart of his master, is his aider and abettor .
13 His being there ready to act, with the power to act, is what makes him an abettor .
14 Now the roar of the deluge appeared to him in the form of an abettor to his plan.
15 When he was in the eyes of the world a criminal-anaider, abettor , lurer-awayof youth and impulsiveness?
16 There is one other abettor of urbanization that we must not overlook: the bewitching power of the money economy.
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