ῥήτωρ, ορος, ὁ,
also ἡ Ar. Fr. 945 (cf. Th. 292 ): ( ἐρῶ ): -
public speaker, μύθων ῥήτορες E. Hec. 124 (anap.), cf. Fr. 597.4, Isoc. 8.129, Arist. Top. 149b25, Phld. Rh. 2.272S., Plu. 2.131a, etc.; esp. at Athens, οἱ ῥήτορες the public speakers in the ἐκκλησία, Ar. Ach. 38, 680, Eq. 60, 358, al., Th. 8.1, And. 3.1, Lys. 30.22, etc.; sg. prob. in IG 12.45.21; οἱ δέκα ῥ. the Ten Attic Orators, Luc. Am. 29; ὁ ῥ. ’par excellence’ = Demosthenes, Hermog. Inv. 4.1, al.
2. one who gives sentence, judge, S. Fr. 1090 .
3. advocate, POxy. 37.4 (i A.D.), etc.
4. later, teacher of eloquence, rhetorician, OGI 712 ( Egypt ), etc. II as Adj., ῥ. λόγος oratory, IG 2.1386.7 .
G4489 — ῤήτωρ
ῤήτορος, ὁ, ( Ρ᾽ΑΩ), a speaker, an orator (Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes, Xenophon, Plato, others): of a forensic orator or advocate, [Act 24:1]. (Cf. Thomas Magister, under the word (p. 324, 15 edition Ritschl); B. D., under the word , 2.)