different between college vs collegue
college
English
Alternative forms
- colledg, colledge (obsolete)
Etymology
From Middle English college, from Old French college, from Latin collegium.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?k?l?d??/
- (US) IPA(key): /?k?l?d??/
- Rhymes: -?l?d?
Noun
college (plural colleges)
- (obsolete) A corporate group; a group of colleagues.
- (in some proper nouns) A group sharing common purposes or goals.
- (politics) An electoral college.
- An academic institution. [From 1560s.]
- A specialized division of a university.
- (chiefly US) An institution of higher education teaching undergraduates.
- (Ireland) A university.
- (attributively, chiefly US) Attendance at an institution of higher education.
- (Canada) A postsecondary institution that offers vocational training and/or associate's degrees.
- (chiefly Britain) A non-specialized, semi-autonomous division of a university, with its own faculty, departments, library, etc.
- (Britain) An institution of further education at an intermediate level; sixth form.
- (Britain) An institution for adult education at a basic or intermediate level (teaching those of any age).
- (Britain, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, South Africa) A high school or secondary school.
- (Australia) A private (non-government) primary or high school.
- (Australia) A residential hall associated with a university, possibly having its own tutors.
- (Singapore) A government high school, short for junior college.
- (in Chile) A bilingual school.
- A specialized division of a university.
Synonyms
- (specialized division of a university) department, faculty, school
Hyponyms
- community college
- electoral college
- junior college
Derived terms
- fresh-out-of-college
- out-of-college
Related terms
- old college try
- collegiate
- collegium
Translations
See also
- university
Anagrams
- geocell
Dutch
Etymology
From Middle Dutch college, from Middle French college, from Latin coll?gium.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?k??le?.??/
- Hyphenation: col?le?ge
- Rhymes: -e???
Noun
college n (plural colleges, diminutive collegetje n)
- lecture, class
- committee, authority
Derived terms
- collegejaar
- collegezaal
Related terms
- collega
Descendants
- ? Indonesian: kolese
Finnish
Etymology
From English college. The "sweatshirt" sense is a pseudo-anglicism and is probably due to the prevalence of college related text on such sweatshirts.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?kolids(i)/, [?ko?lids?(i)] (especially in the sweatshirt sense)
- IPA(key): /?kolid?(i)/, [?ko?lid?(i)]
Noun
college
- sweatshirt (especially one with text referring to a certain college)
- college (learning institution)
Declension
This table shows the spoken declension with IPA symbols, which falls nicely into risti -class.
Written declension is more complicated due to the difficulty of combining "college" with risti-type endings. Therefore, it might be advisable to avoid inflecting this word in writing by using synonyms, when available. If one has to, one option is to write as if the pronunciation were finnicized to /?ko?l?e?ge?/, in which case the word would fall into nalle-category with the exception that collegeiden seems to be more commonly used as genitive plural than collegejen and collegein is not used as genitive plural:
Synonyms
- (sweatshirt): collegepusero
Middle English
Alternative forms
- colegg, colege, collage, colage, colegie
Etymology
From Old French college, from Latin collegium.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /k?l???d?(?)/, /k?l?a?d?(?)/, /?k?l?d?(?)/
Noun
college (plural collegis)
- A grouping of clergy (usually relying on public funding).
- A grouping of teachers and students; a university or part of one.
- A grouping of colleagues; a team or organisation.
Related terms
- collegial
- collegian
- collegiate
Descendants
- English: college
- Scots: college
References
- “coll???e, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-12-12.
Old French
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin collegium.
Noun
college m (oblique plural colleges, nominative singular colleges, nominative plural college)
- institution; organization (establishment of people with similar aims/goals)
Descendants
- ? Dutch: college
- ? Indonesian: kolese
- ? Middle English: college
- English: college
- ? Finnish: college
- ? Hindi: ????? (k?lij)
- ? Russian: ??????? (kolledž)
- ? Serbo-Croatian: koledž
- ? Slovene: koledž
- English: college
- French: collège
- ? Turkish: kolej
- ? Middle Irish: coláisde
- Irish: coláiste
- Norman: collège
college From the web:
- what college did trump go to
- what college football games are on today
- what college should i go to
- what college did patrick mahomes go to
- what college football games are on tonight
- what college did donald trump go to
- what college did lebron james go to
- what college did donald trump attend
collegue
English
Noun
collegue
- Misspelling of colleague.
Middle French
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin collega.
Noun
collegue m (plural collegues)
- co-worker; colleague
References
- “collègue” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
collegue From the web:
- what colleagues means
- what colleagues say about you
- what colleagues think about you
- what's colleague in french
- what does colleague mean
- what does colleague
- that's what colleges are for
- what should alex's colleagues do
you may also like
- college vs collegue
- assistant vs collegue
- affront vs effron
- geospiza vs geospizine
- affronts vs affronty
- affront vs affronty
- talent vs untalentedness
- scribbler vs scrabbler
- scribbles vs scribbler
- scribbled vs scribbler
- scribblier vs scribbler
- author vs scribbler
- scrawler vs scribbler
- poet vs scribbler
- hack vs scribbler
- wool vs scribbler
- palooka vs palooza
- palooka vs polack
- palookaville vs palooka
- incompetent vs palooka