resenter

resenter

(rɪˈzɛntə)
n
a person who feels resentment
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
so increase resenter alary hile Sports presenter Gabby Logan has seen a salary increase of roughly PS60,000, while BBC political editor l Laura Kuenssberg is up by around PS30,000.
ITV's have won elevision Popular resenter." ning The pair who host ITV's I'm A Celebrity have won the National Television Award for Most Popular Entertainment Presenter for 13 years running since 2001.
FORMER Busted star Matt Willis says winning his battle with the booze means he can now move in with his beautiful girlfriend, MTV resenter Emma Griffiths.
SHE'S BACK ON THE DATING SCENE, AND THAT SUITS TV RESENTER AMANDA LAMB RIGHT DOWN TO THE GROUND
The jockey parted company with 50-1 shot P resenter at the sixth flight in the first division of the Weatherbys Insurance Novices' Hurdle.
His last TV appearance was on BBC Scotland's Lives Less Ordinary series in March when he and Kates poke top resenter Kirsty Wark about how the disease had affected them.
BBC Radio Merseyside editor Mick Ord has two local stars in the final frame -phone-in presenter Roger Phillips and Morning Merseyside cop resenter Linda McDermott.
They will then be used in a special video link-up top resenter Cat Deeley in the London studios.
While on Uned 5 he visited Madagascar with cop resenter Lisa Gwilym, and helped build a community kitchen in a small village.
The narrator of "Resenter" decides to manage his anger in a healthy way by growing a tumor outside himself.
Whenever this is resurrected in the Press - it's on, it's of she's heartbroken, his wife's dealing with her trauma by becoming a TV p resenter, and so on - by a remarkable coincidence, one of the trio seems to have something to promote.
The attitude that arises in the resenter is one of defiance in which she denies to herself and others the presumption, fostered by the wrongdoer's action, that she is low in value.(25) This psychological reaction is analogous to one's physical reaction of striking out in self-defense at an assault.