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Origin and history of professor


professor(n.)

late 14c., professour, "one who teaches a branch of knowledge," especially in a university, from Old French professeur (14c.) and directly from Latin professor "person who professes to be an expert in some art or science; teacher of highest rank," agent noun from profiteri "lay claim to, declare openly" (see profess). As a title prefixed to a name, it dates from 1706. Short form prof is recorded from 1838.

Professor. One professing religion. This canting use of the word comes down from the Elizabethan period, but is obsolete in England. [Thornton, "American Glossary," 1912]

This sense is traced in OED to 1530s, but is perhaps a revival by the English Puritans of the use of the word from c. 1400 in the sense of "one who openly professes religious faith."

also from late 14c.

Entries linking to professor


profess(v.)

early 14c., professen, "to take a vow" (in a religious order), a back-formation from profession or else from Medieval Latin professare, from professus "avowed," literally "having declared publicly," past participle of Latin profiteri "declare openly, testify voluntarily, acknowledge, make public statement of," from pro- "forth" (from PIE root *per- (1) "forward") + fateri (past participle fassus) "acknowledge, confess" (akin to fari "to speak," from PIE root *bha- (2) "to speak, tell, say").

The meaning "declare openly" is recorded from 1520s, "a direct borrowing of the sense from Latin" [Barnhart]. Related: Professed; professing.

prof(n.)

colloquial shortening of professor, attested by 1838.

  • professorial
  • professorship
  • *bha-
  • See All Related Words (5)
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Trends of professor


adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/ with a 7-year moving average; ngrams are probably unreliable.

More to explore


ethnocentric
Gumplowicz, professor of sociology at the University of Gratz, says that there are illusions which have been most baneful...["Address of Professor J.C....
chair
The meaning "office of a professor" (1816) is extended from the seat from which a professor lectures (mid-15c.)....
magnolia
cultivated, 1748, named by Plumier from Magnolius, Latinized name of Pierre Magnol (1638-1715), French physician and botanist, professor...
henotheism
Coined by (Friedrich) Max Müller (1823-1900), professor of comparative philology at Oxford....
ester
compound formed by an acid joined to an alcohol, 1852, coined in German in 1848 by German chemist Leopold Gmelin (1788-1853), professor...
psychographic
Among the new patents announced is one to Adolphus Theodore Wagner, of Berlin, in the kingdom of Prussia, professor of music...
logarithm
and published a table in 1614; the kind now chiefly in use were invented by his contemporary Henry Briggs (1561-1630), a professor...
academic
1580s, "relating to an academy," also "collegiate, scholarly," from Latin academicus "of the (classical Athenian) Academy," from Academia, name of the place where Plato taught (see academy). It is attested by 1610s in English in the sense "belonging to the classical Academy in At
staff
Middle English staf, "stick or pole," especially one about 5 or 6 feet long and carried in the hand, from Old English stæf (plural stafas), "walking stick, strong pole used for carrying, rod used as a weapon, pastoral staff," probably originally *stæb, from Proto-Germanic *stab-
faculty
late 14c., "ability, opportunity, means, resources," from Old French faculte "skill, accomplishment, learning" (14c., Modern French faculté) and directly from Latin facultatem (nominative facultas) "power, ability, capability, opportunity; sufficient number, abundance, wealth," f

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Dictionary entries near professor

  • professed
  • profession
  • professional
  • professionalism
  • professionalize
  • professor
  • professorial
  • professorship
  • proffer
  • proficiency
  • proficient
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