n
A teacher (a person who teaches in a school).
n
The title for someone who is an academician.
n
An assistant mayor of a French commune.
n
(US, education) A college professor who is employed part-time or for a limited time, is junior to a full professor, or is otherwise not eligible for tenure.
n
The state or office of being an adjutant, assistant, or helper.
n
The position or role of an administrator.
n
In France, a civil servant who teaches as a professor.
n
The state or period of working as an apothecary.
adj
(obsolete) chief; primary; primordial
n
Alternative form of ass'n (association)
n
Abbreviation of assistant. [(obsolete) Someone who is present; a bystander, a witness.]
n
A congregation of people in one place for a purpose.
n
(education) An entry-level position in a university faculty, lower than an associate professor and a full professor.
n
A position of employment as an assistant.
n
(education) A teacher in a higher education institution who ranks above an assistant professor and below a professor.
n
Abbreviation of assistant. [(obsolete) Someone who is present; a bystander, a witness.]
n
The office or profession of an attorney.
n
The rank or office of a bursar.
n
Caucuses generally; the realm or sphere of caucuses.
n
(education) A college or university official whose duties vary depending on the institution.
n
(education) A distinguished professorship at a university.
n
One who holds the role of academic chair.
n
The role or status of chela (pupil or disciple).
n
A title and role in research institutes for a high-ranking scientist
n
An executive responsible for the technological development and often the overall technical infrastructure of the products of a business, typically directly accountable to the chief executive officer or the board.
n
A student of civil law at a university or college.
n
The process by which someone is coached or tutored; instruction.
n
A lecturer who lectures collaboratively with another lecturer.
n
Obsolete form of college. [(obsolete) A corporate group; a group of colleagues.]
n
(obsolete) A corporate group; a group of colleagues.
n
(in Ancient Rome) Any of several legal associations
n
An academic meeting or seminar usually led by a different lecturer and on a different topic at each meeting.
n
(obsolete) A deputy or clerk of a foreign official
n
The role or office of commissioner.
n
(historical) The inter-relationship of prayer groups or religious societies under the oversight of an itinerant preacher who is assisted by the local preachers attached to each society.
v
To teach pupils with special educational needs alongside those without.
n
A teacher that one works alongside.
n
Joint tutelage (by two or more tutors)
n
(education) A school counselor, often in a specialty such as careers, education, or health.
n
A teacher who aids such a student.
n
A title afforded to a dean.
n
An assistant to a lecturer.
n
a person gifted, trained, or intending to instruct
n
Obsolete form of director. [One who directs; the person in charge of managing a department or directorate (e.g., director of engineering), project, or production (as in a show or film, e.g., film director).]
n
(uncountable) The condition of being a disciple
n
A professor with the highest academic rank at a university.
n
A teacher or lecturer at some universities (in central Europe, etc.)
n
Professional position or title of a doctor.
n
Obsolete form of doctorship. [Professional position or title of a doctor.]
n
(derogatory) An official or administrator in a school district or government body.
n
One who edutains, who educates in an entertaining manner.
n
An experiential learning opportunity, usually offered by a school, similar to an internship, but generally shorter in duration.
n
In Germany, professor without chair, often in a side-area, or being subordinated to a professor with chair.
n
The members of a profession.
n
(Canada, US) A physician undergoing a fellowship (supervised subspecialty medical training) after having completed a residency (specialty training program).
n
(education) A temporary position at an academic institution with limited teaching duties and ample time for research.
n
(US) Synonym of filing clerk
n
(now chiefly North Dakota) Synonym of firehouse primary
n
(business) A rule according to which decisions and transactions need approval from two individuals, typically the CEO and CFO.
n
(slang, dated) A person who coaches students for an upcoming examination.
n
(sometimes humorous) An influential advisor or mentor.
v
In European institutions of higher education, to qualify as an instructor or professor, usually by defending a dissertation or similar project.
n
A person who home teaches or one who has a home teaching assignment.
n
An organization that recognizes excellence among peers, typically associated with an educational facility or other structured organization.
n
(UK, Australia, Ireland, education) A list of high-achieving students at a university or college.
n
(UK) One who is on the point of taking a Master of Arts degree at an English university.
n
A professor with the highest academic title at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
n
(obsolete) One who educates; an instructor.
n
One who instructs; a teacher.
n
A job taken by a student in order to learn a profession or trade.
n
A professor with the highest academic title at Duke University.
n
A work based learning program that sometimes leads to some form of formal recognition of acquired skills; a scholarship.
n
A member of a university or college below the rank of assistant professor or reader.
n
The rank or position of lecturer.
n
(Canada, slang) A provincial or territorial legislature building.
n
An ambassador or messenger.
n
(dated, rare) A student.
n
(archaic) instruction; tuition
n
(idiomatic) A list of abbreviations, separated by commas, representing the academic qualifications and civil or military honours achieved by a person
n
An academic degree in law awarded by some universities.
adj
Befitting the status or skill of a magister or master; authoritative, masterly.
adj
Pertaining to or befitting a master; authoritative.
adj
Obsolete form of main. [Of chief or leading importance; prime, principal.]
adj
Of, befitting, or belonging to a manager; managerial.
n
The office or period of a manager.
n
(obsolete) The philosopher's stone.
n
One who officially belongs to a group.
n
The state of being a mentee.
n
A governmental department responsible for education and related affairs.
n
(UK) An examiner at Oxford and Cambridge universities.
adj
(informal) Officelike; resembling or pertaining to an office.
n
A paraprofessional educator; a teacher's assistant responsible for helping students in the classroom.
n
Pronunciation spelling of professor. [The most senior rank for an academic at a university or similar institution, informally also known as "full professor."]
n
The role or position of a physician.
n
A class involving learning and discussion in small groups.
adj
President (used as a title written before a president's name)
n
Synonym of distinguished professor
n
Abbreviation of private docent. [(in German-speaking countries) An associate professor (in a university) who has obtained a doctorate, written a habilitation thesis and given a lecture in the hope of becoming a full professor.]
n
Abbreviation of private docent. [(in German-speaking countries) An associate professor (in a university) who has obtained a doctorate, written a habilitation thesis and given a lecture in the hope of becoming a full professor.]
n
(in some German universities) A lecturer who may teach without supervision by a professor
n
Alternative form of privatdozent [In some European countries, an academic who holds all formal qualifications (doctorate and habilitation) to become a tenured university professor.]
n
In some European countries, an academic who holds all formal qualifications (doctorate and habilitation) to become a tenured university professor.
n
(in German-speaking countries) An associate professor (in a university) who has obtained a doctorate, written a habilitation thesis and given a lecture in the hope of becoming a full professor.
n
(informal) Clipping of professor. [The most senior rank for an academic at a university or similar institution, informally also known as "full professor."]
n
Abbreviation of professor ordinarius. [(academia, chiefly in Germany) A professor with a chair, representing a given area.]
n
(US, informal) A teacher or faculty member at a college or university regardless of formal rank.
n
The realm or sphere of professors; professors, collectively.
n
The manners or habits of a professor.
n
Professors considered as a group or body.
adj
Characteristic of a professor.
n
(obsolete) a young and unexperienced professor
adj
(informal, possibly nonstandard) Professorial; having the manner or appearance of a professor or professors.
n
(academia) A full professor of a Dutch, Flemish, South African, or German university who acts as the principal supervisor of a student's doctoral research.
n
(psychology) The phenomenon that students who teach others learn at a better quality than students who don't teach.
n
(obsolete) A person preparing for, or taking, their final exam at university.
n
The role or office of a reader.
n
The role or office of a recorder.
n
Synonym of distinguished professor
n
Alternative form of regents professor [Synonym of distinguished professor]
n
Part of the title of a regius professor.
n
(Australia, New Zealand) A supply teacher.
n
The occupation of being a research assistant.
n
A full professor who is exclusively or mainly engaged in research, and who has few or no teaching obligations.
n
(India) A society; a congregation; a worshipping assembly, or church, especially of the Brahmo Samaj.
n
The state of being a scholar.
n
A governing body of people elected (a board of directors or board of trustees) to oversee management of a school district and represent the interests of residents.
n
Alternative form of schoolteacher. [A teacher working in a school.]
n
A teacher working in a school.
n
An academic title for a researcher usually of comparable standing to an associate professor.
n
An instructor hired by a college or universities on a temporary basis.
n
In elementary and secondary schools, an elected student body which mediates between students and staff and also organizes school-wide activities.
n
A teacher-in-training who is teaching classes under the supervision of a teacher or trainer.
n
The position or role of a student.
n
A club or informal group of people sharing knowledge of a specific subject.
n
A small group of people who meet regularly to discuss a shared field of study.
adj
(obsolete) Subordinate.
n
A lesser or secondary character in fiction.
adj
Of lower than collegiate level.
n
(Canada, US, India, Ireland) A supply teacher.
n
(Britain, Canada) A teacher who fills a temporary position in a school on a short-term basis; often supplied by an agency.
v
(intransitive) To act as a teaching assistant.
n
(slang) Nickname for a teacher.
n
An indication; a lesson.
n
(idiomatic) A student who is perceived to be favored by the teacher.
n
The residence of a teacher, when provided by the teacher's school.
adj
suggestive of a teacher
n
The position or role of a teacher.
n
(education) An individual who assists a teacher with instructional responsibilities, often by helping the main teacher by supporting students with learning disabilities or physical disabilities.
n
Schooling, apprenticeship; novitiate.
n
The condition of, or the time served by, a trainee; training.
n
The training or instruction provided by a teacher or tutor.
n
Instruction; teaching; guidance.
adj
(rare) Tutelar, tutelary.
n
Alternative spelling of tutelage [The act of guarding, protecting, or guiding; guardianship; protection]
n
Obsolete spelling of tutelage [The act of guarding, protecting, or guiding; guardianship; protection]
n
(obsolete or Quebec law) One who has the charge of a child or pupil and his estate; a guardian.
n
The role or status of a tutor.
n
The duty of a tutor; tutelage
n
Archaic spelling of tutor. [One who teaches another (usually called a student, learner, or tutee) in a one-on-one or small-group interaction.]
n
(Quebec law) a female tutor (person other than a parent having charge of a child or other person requiring protection)
n
Synonym of distinguished professor
n
(archaic, rare) The period or status of attending a university.
n
Someone who helps others unlearn or overcome unhealthy social conditioning.
n
Synonym of visiting scholar
n
Synonym of visiting scholar
n
(education) A scholar from an institution who visits a host university to teach, lecture or perform research on a particular topic.
n
(Britain) A head or overseer of an institution such as a college (in which case, equivalent to the university's chancellor) or cathedral or hospital, who resolves disputes, gives ceremonial speeches, etc.
n
A Wikimedian who holds a visiting scholar position at an educational institution.
n
(US, education, New England, derogatory) A special education teacher.
n
The honor or position of being a wrangler at the University of Cambridge, England.
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