From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishcoordinatorco‧or‧di‧na‧tor /kəʊˈɔːdəneɪtə $ koʊˈɔːrdəneɪtər/●くろまる○しろまる○しろまるAWL noun [countable]ORGANIZEsomeone who organizes the way people work together in a particular activityExamples from the Corpuscoordinator• His wife, Darlene, was a fashionstylist and coordinator.• It got down to Cowher and Dave Wannstedt, then-defensive coordinator of Dallas.• Fien is no stranger to Tormey, who recruited him when he was defensivecoordinator at Washington.• This is Ms. Darnell, the hospital's nursingcoordinator.• They also lost a handful of coordinators and assistants in the past five years, including two colossal defections.• Dungy recently hired David Shula as offensivecoordinator.• In his capacity as world-wide planning coordinator, Mueller had been invited by Nate Cocello to attend the meeting as an observer.• Some also organised meetings for chairpersons and for trainingcoordinators to help them with their new roles.From Longman Business Dictionarycoordinatorco‧or‧di‧na‧tor /kəʊˈɔːdəneɪtəkoʊˈɔːdəneɪtər/ noun [countable]JOBsomeone who organizes the way people work together in a particular activityHe was the coordinator of the whole project.‘The tourist potential is there, ’ says Shervin Alaghband, marketing coordinator for British Airways in Tehran.