collegiate
adjEtymology
From Middle English collegiate, from Medieval Latin collēgiātus (“colleague”), from collēgium (“community, group”).
- inherited from collegiate
Definitions
Of, or relating to a college, or college students.
- In De Tolla’s videos, he suggests Livvy has been deployed to charm Madden into committing to attending LSU when he is of age to play collegiate football.
Collegial.
Of or relating to a collegium.
- To what happy man did this secluded nook belong? To Andrey Ivanovitch Tyentyetnikov, a landowner of the Tremalahansky district, a young unmarried man of thirty-three, by rank a collegiate secretary.
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A high school.
A member of a college, a collegian
A member of a college, a collegian; someone who has received a college education.
A fellow-collegian
A fellow-collegian; a colleague.
- those tables of artificial sines and tangents, not long since set out by mine old collegiate, good friend, and late fellow-student of Christ Church in Oxford, Mr. Edmund Gunter […].
An inmate of a prison.
Ellipsis of collegiate dictionary.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
A definitional loop anchored at collegiate. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.
A definitional loop anchored at collegiate. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.
7 hops · closes at collegiate
curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA