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"Section C"

] One who creates, produces, or
constitutes. Specifically, the Supreme Being.


To sin's rebuke and my Creater's
praise.

Shak.


The poets and artists of Greece, who are at the
same time its prophets, the creators of its divinities,
and the revealers of its theological beliefs.

Caird.


Cre*a"tor*ship, n. State or
condition of a creator.


Cre*a"tress, n. [L.
creatrix: cf. F. créatrice.] She who
creates.
Spenser.


||Cre*a"trix (-tr?ks), n. [L.]
A creatress. [R.]


Crea"tur*al (kr?"t?r-a]/>l; 135),
a. Belonging to a creature; having the
qualities of a creature.
[R.]


Crea"ture (krē"tūr; 135),
n. [F. créature, L.
creatura. See Create.] 1.
Anything created; anything not self-existent; especially,
any being created with life; an animal; a man.


He asked water, a creature so common and
needful that it was against the law of nature to deny him.

Fuller.


God's first creature was light.


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