confrere
nounEtymology
From Old French confrere, from Latin confrāter. The word which was originally only used for the second sense became obsolete in the 17th century and reappeared in the mid 18th century as a re-borrowing of Modern French confrère whence the first sense is from.
- derived from confrère whence the first sense is from
- derived from confrāter
- derived from confrere
Definitions
A colleague or fellow, especially a professional one.
- Unfortunately, when it comes to the informant who turns state’s evidence against a confrere, the OED slaps on the obscure origin label.
A fellow member of a religious organization, referring especially to Catholic religious…
A fellow member of a religious organization, referring especially to Catholic religious orders of men.
- Roger Bacon had little reverence for their Franciscan confrere, Alexander of Hales...
- ... but there was a limited number of magisterial chairs, and so, after a couple of years, the Dominican and Franciscan Masters had to stand aside for the next confrere in line.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for confrere. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA