different between faculty vs knowhow
faculty
English
Etymology
From Middle English faculte (“power, property”), from Old French faculte, from Latin facultas (“capability, ability, skill, abundance, plenty, stock, goods, property; in Medieval Latin also a body of teachers”), another form of facilitas (“easiness, facility, etc.”), from facul, another form of facilis (“easy, facile”); see facile.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?fæ.k?l.ti/
Noun
faculty (plural faculties)
- (chiefly US) The academic staff at schools, colleges, universities or not-for-profit research institutes, as opposed to the students or support staff.
- A division of a university.
- Often in the plural: an ability, power, or skill.
- An authority, power, or privilege conferred by a higher authority.
- (Church of England) A licence to make alterations to a church.
- The members of a profession.
Usage notes
In the sense of academic staff at a university, academic staff, teaching staff or simply staff are preferred in British English.
Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:faculty
Related terms
- facultative
Translations
Further reading
- faculty in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
- faculty in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
faculty From the web:
- what faculty means
- what faculty hiring committees want
- what faculty is economics
- what faculty is computer science under
- what faculty is psychology
- what faculty is nursing
- what faculty is accounting under
- what faculty is political science under
knowhow
English
Noun
knowhow (countable and uncountable, plural knowhows)
- Alternative spelling of know-how
knowhow From the web:
- what is knowhow cloud
- what is knowhow care plan
- what's team knowhow cloud
- what is knowhow repair
- what is team knowhow
- what is currys knowhow
- how to use knowhow cloud
- how do i access my knowhow cloud
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- faculty vs knowhow
- gratification vs remuneration
- broken-down vs customary
- gross vs temporary
- advise vs bellow
- whisk vs hobble
- outcome vs work
- unexpected vs curt
- paunchy vs plump
- thoughtlessness vs abandon
- mosey vs whisk
- vehement vs hasty
- race vs mode
- ennoble vs excite
- forsaking vs endurance
- dweller vs villager
- recapitulate vs rehearse
- teach vs animate
- exhibit vs interrogate
- contented vs jubilant