The mayor will act as the final arbiter in any dispute between board members.
2
: a person or agency whose judgment or opinion is considered authoritative
arbiters of taste
Did you know?
Are arbiter and arbitrationarbitrary?
A large portion of the words we use today come from Latin roots. Many of these words retain a meaning that is closely related to their Latin ancestor, although sometimes they will drift a considerable distance from their roots (sinister, for instance, had the meaning of “on the left side” in Latin, but also meant “unlucky, inauspicious”). In some instances, a single Latin word will give rise to multiple words in English, some of which have strayed in meaning, and others which have not.
An example of this may be found in our word arbiter. We trace it to the Latin root with the same spelling, arbiter, meaning “eyewitness, onlooker, person appointed to settle a dispute.” A number of English words stem from the Latin arbiter, many of which have to do with judging or being a judge. An arbiter is a judge, and arbitration is the act of judging, or serving as an arbiter. Yet the most common meaning of arbitrary is “existing or coming about seemingly at random or by chance or as a capricious and unreasonable act of will,” which seems to be quite a bit different in meaning from the other two words. Arbitrary does indeed come from the same Latin root, and its oldest meaning in English was “depending on choice or discretion particularly regarding the decision of a judge or a tribunal.” But over time it developed additional senses that are somewhat removed from that initial meaning.
Recent Examples on the WebAnd the ultimate arbiter of what Disney can and can’t be is the fan, the viewer, the guest. Cynthia Littleton, Variety, 10 Sep. 2022 The president is the ultimate arbiter of whether any of those classifications applies — or should be lifted. Charlie Savage, BostonGlobe.com, 12 Aug. 2022 Normally, an argument like this would be settled by the Census Bureau, the ultimate arbiter of all things dweeb. Andrew Van Dam, Washington Post, 5 Aug. 2022 This split reaction is a grim reminder that for many Americans, their cultural outlook, social media outlets, and politics have replaced law as the arbiter of behavior, rights, obligations, interactions, truth, and democracy. Mark A. Cohen, Forbes, 17 Aug. 2022 There is no federal statute that appoints the NBER as the official arbiter of recessions. Phillip W. Magness, WSJ, 27 July 2022 The nonprofit National Bureau of Economic Research is the official arbiter of when recessions begin and end, but typically doesn’t confirm recessions until months later. Roland Li, San Francisco Chronicle, 29 July 2022 They will be tried not before a jury of 12 of their peers, but before a judge who will be the sole arbiter of their fate, court records indicate. Scott Macfarlane, CBS News, 24 May 2022 His petition said Montgomery has been the sole arbiter of his daughter's personal life and medical treatment since she was appointed.NBC News, 9 July 2021 See More
Word History
Etymology
Middle English arbitour, arbitre, borrowed from Anglo-French, borrowed from Latin arbiter "eyewitness, onlooker, person appointed to settle a dispute," perhaps, if going back to *ad-biteros, from ad-ad- + *-biteros, derivative from a base *-bit- akin to bītere, baetere, bētere "to go," of obscure origin