Spotter in a sentence as a noun

Don't be stupid on the bench press by lifting your max without a spotter.

I wonder if they have tracking planes or a spotter out on the water.

It's dangerous and hard to bench without spotter.

For some reason, I thought the spotter only saw it with hundreds or tens of yards to spare.

Their job could go from spotter to laser operator.

Snipers work in tandem with a spotter already.

Thinking through how this would work .. would the sniper's spotter also become the painter?

I want red.\n spotter: you're too frustrated to type "certain" correctly.

If you don't use a spotter and you've progressed to some really heavy weights then it can be dangerous.

Let me\nrephrase..."Some things never change... spotter: acquire the target.\n sniper: rodger.

Yeah he beat it by a full hour and three minutes, using a spotter airplane and a new co-pilot.

For me, the coolest fact was that the Titanic's spotter saw the iceberg when it was still a mile away.

So, he shouldn't reverse without a spotter, and he should be extra careful merging on the freeway.

You can bench without a spotter pretty safely up to about 75kg, at which point the roll of shame starts getting challenging.

Actual the recoil would probably screw that up. I think you would have to have the spotter manning the target designator.

We have Shotspotter in some areas Minneapolis, as well as city-wide wifi.

Or what if it just has a spotter in it relaying fire missions to a mortar team elsewhere in a crowded village square?

Blue.\n sniper: but I really wanted red, impending doom an all that.\n spotter: with blue you'll get purple if you hit the damn target!\n sniper: Oops!

Issue spotter: I think we've got him on trespass to a protected computer system used in interstate commerce, common law fraud, and theft of services.

At least if I read it correctly, this just moves all the functions of a spotter into the reticle itself, where it automatically does calculations.

The way film, TV and literature has always presented it, was it hit the berg in an inky black night with scant but a faint glow from the swinging lantern aboard the spotter's helm.

Other non- meteorological factors that must be considered when looking at the increase in reported tornado frequency over the past 33 years are the advent of cellular telephones; the development of spotter networks by NWS offices, local emergency management officials, and local media; and population shifts.

Spotter definitions

noun

a worker employed at a dry-cleaning establishment to remove spots

noun

a worker employed to apply spots (as markers or identifiers)

noun

a person employed to keep watch for some anticipated event

See also: lookout sentinel sentry watch scout picket

noun

someone who is the first to observe something

See also: finder discoverer