In electronics, a norator is a theoretical linear, time-invariant one-port which can have an arbitrary current and voltage between its terminals.
A norator represents a controlled voltage or current source with infinite gain.
For example, the output of an ideal opamp behaves as a norator, producing nonzero output voltage and current that meet circuit requirements despite a zero input.
A nullator in parallel with a norator is equivalent to a short (zero voltage any current).
A nullator in series with a norator is an open circuit (zero current, any voltage).