different between scholar vs orientalist

scholar

English

Etymology

From Middle English scolar, scolare, scoler, scolere (also scholer), from Old English sc?lere (scholar, learner), from Late Latin schol?ris, from schola (school), from Ancient Greek ???????? (skholeîon), from ????? (skhol?, spare time, leisure", later, "conversations and the knowledge gained through them during free time; the places where these conversations took place), equivalent to school +? -er. Compare Saterland Frisian Sköiler, Middle Low German sch?lære, sch?lere, sch?ler (> modern German Low German Schöler), Dutch scholier, German Schüler. Doublet of escolar.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?sk?l?/
  • (US) IPA(key): /?sk?l?/
  • Rhymes: -?l?(r)

Noun

scholar (plural scholars)

  1. A student; one who studies at school or college, typically having a scholarship.
  2. A specialist in a particular branch of knowledge.
  3. A learned person; a bookman.

Synonyms

  • (student): pupil, student
  • (specialist): expert, specialist
  • (learned person): academic, learned person, savant, scholarly person, erudite

Derived terms

Related terms

  • scholiast

Translations

See also

  • savant

Further reading

  • scholar in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • scholar in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.

Anagrams

  • chorals, lorchas, orchals

scholar From the web:

  • what scholarships can i get
  • what scholarships do i qualify for
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  • what scholarships can i get with a 4.0 gpa
  • what scholarships does ucla offer
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  • what scholarships are taxable
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orientalist

English

Etymology

oriental +? -ist

Pronunciation

  • (US) IPA(key): /???i??nt?l?st/

Noun

orientalist (plural orientalists)

  1. A person (especially a scholar) interested in the Orient.
    • 1684, George Bright, preface to The works of the Reverend and learned John Lightfoot D. D.
      Which is rendred somewhat more probable by that very learned Orientalist Dr. Pocok, who tells us the Arabick verb Hausch answering to the Hebrew ??? signifies three things, viz. to hast, to fear, to be ashamed.

Translations

Anagrams

  • literations, natrosilite, relationist

Romanian

Etymology

From French orientaliste

Noun

orientalist m (plural orientali?ti)

  1. orientalist

Declension


Swedish

Noun

orientalist c

  1. an orientalist

Declension

orientalist From the web:

  • what orientalist studied
  • orientalist meaning
  • what is orientalist historiography
  • what does orientalism mean
  • what is orientalist in history
  • what is orientalist art
  • what is orientalist in islam
  • what is orientalist meaning in hindi
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