different between scholarship vs sizar
scholarship
English
Etymology
From scholar +? -ship.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?sk?l???p/
- (US) IPA(key): /?sk??l????p/
Noun
scholarship (countable and uncountable, plural scholarships)
- A grant-in-aid to a student.
- The character or qualities of a scholar.
- The activity, methods or attainments of a scholar.
- (uncountable) The sum of knowledge accrued by scholars; the realm of refined learning.
- (Australia, dated) The first year of high school, often accompanied by exams that needed to be passed before advancement to the higher grades.
Synonyms
- (money to assist a student to study): allowance, grant, stipend, subsidy, bursary
- (character of a scholar):
- (activity of a scholar): scholarly method
- (knowledge accrued by the activity of scholars):
Related terms
- school
- scholar, scholarly
- scholarism (archaic)
- scholastic, scholasticism
- scholasticate
Translations
Verb
scholarship (third-person singular simple present scholarships, present participle scholarshiping or scholarshipping, simple past and past participle scholarshiped or scholarshipped)
- (intransitive) To attend an institution on a scholarship.
- Up from the tenements of the Lower East Side, he had scholarshiped at Cornell and Harvard Law.
- (transitive) To grant a scholarship to.
- In the first year, twenty children were scholarshiped to attend the Kids Across America Kamp in Branson, Missouri.
- Judith Lewis is a doctoral student at State University, and she also works full-time as an academic tutor for 10 scholarshiped student athletes.
scholarship From the web:
- what scholarships can i get
- what scholarships do i qualify for
- what scholarships am i eligible for
- what scholarships are there
- what scholarships does ucla offer
- what scholarships are available
- what scholarships does harvard offer
- what scholarships does nyu offer
sizar
English
Alternative forms
- sizer
Etymology
An alteration of sizer, from size (“fixed portion”) + -er.
Noun
sizar (plural sizars)
- (Britain) An undergraduate at Trinity College, Dublin and the University of Cambridge who receives an allowance for his college expenses or tuition, sometimes in return for doing a defined job.
See also
- sizar on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- bursar
- scholarship
References
- Webster's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary, Springfield, Massachusetts, G.&C. Merriam Co., 1967
Ido
Etymology
Borrowed from English seize and French saisir.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /si?zar/
Verb
sizar (present tense sizas, past tense sizis, future tense sizos, imperative sizez, conditional sizus)
- (transitive) to seize, gripe, catch or lay hold of
- (transitive) to distrain (property)
- (transitive, figuratively) to take, grasp quickly, apprehend (arrest)
Inflection
Veps
Etymology
From Proto-Finnic *sesar, from Proto-Balto-Slavic *swés?.
Noun
sizar
- sister
Inflection
References
- Zajceva, N. G.; Mullonen, M. I. (2007) , “??????”, in Uz’ venä-vepsläine vajehnik / Novyj russko-vepsskij slovar? [New Russian–Veps Dictionary], Petrozavodsk: Periodika
sizar From the web:
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