- A spy - Broker - Delegate - Go-between - Initially a good emissary negotiates trust with someone like James Bond - One acting for another - Operative
- The act of substituting or putting one person or
thing in the place of another; as, the substitution of an agent,
attorney, or representative to act for one in his absense; the
substitution of bank notes for gold and silver as a circulating medium. - The state of being substituted for another. - The office or authority of one acting for another;
delegated authority. - The designation of a person in a will to take a
devise or legacy, either on failure of a former devisee or legatee by
incapacity or unwillingness to accept, or after him. - The doctrine that Christ suffered vicariously, being
substituted for the sinner, and that his sufferings were expiatory. - The act or process of substituting an atom or radical
for another atom or radical; metethesis; also, the state of being so
substituted. See Metathesis.
- Deception - Doubleness; a twofold state. - Doubleness of heart or speech; insincerity; a sustained
form of deception which consists in entertaining or pretending to
entertain one of feelings, and acting as if influenced by another; bad
faith. - The use of two or more distinct allegations or answers,
where one is sufficient. - In indictments, the union of two incompatible offenses.
- Not obligatory - Of one’s own free will - Optional - Proceeding from the will; produced in or by an act of
choice. - Unconstrained by the interference of another;
unimpelled by the influence of another; not prompted or persuaded by
another; done of his or its own accord; spontaneous; acting of one's
self, or of itself; free. - Done by design or intention; intentional; purposed;
intended; not accidental; as, if a man kills another by lopping a tree,
it is not voluntary manslaughter. - Of or pertaining to the will; subject to, or
regulated by, the will; as, the voluntary motions of an animal, such as
the movements of the leg or arm (in distinction from involuntary
motions, such as the movements of the heart); the voluntary muscle
fibers, which are the agents in voluntary motion.