nomenclator

Etymology
From, from +.

Noun

 * 1) An assistant who specializes in providing timely and spatially relevant reminders of the names of persons and other socially important information.
 * 2) * 63 b.c., Marcus Tullius Cicero Pro Lucio Murena: Oratio Ad Iudices, 1956, Page 115
 * If he does not know them, it is deception to pretend that he does, while all the time he has never heard of them until instructed by the nomenclator.
 * 1) One who assigns or constructs names for persons or objects or classes thereof, as in a scientific classification system.
 * 2) A document containing such name assignments.
 * 3) An early form of substitution cipher.
 * 1) A document containing such name assignments.
 * 2) An early form of substitution cipher.
 * 1) An early form of substitution cipher.

Synonyms

 * vocabulary, glossary

Related terms

 * nomenclature

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) a slave who acted as receptionist, keeping track of the names of clients arriving to see his master
 * 2) a slave who kept track of the names of the other slaves for his master
 * 3)  a high-ranking court dignitary

Etymology
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