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1 fellow
fellow [ˈfeləʊ]1. nounb. ( = comrade) camarade mc. [of society] membre md. (in universities) (US) boursier m, - ière f ; (British) ≈ chargé(e) m(f) de cours (souvent membre du conseil d'administration)2. compounds► fellow countryman (plural fellow countrymen), fellow countrywoman (plural fellow countrywomen) noun compatriote mf* * *['feləʊ] 1.1) (colloq) ( man) type (colloq) m, homme mwhat do you fellows think? — qu'est-ce que vous en pensez, vous autres?
2) (of society, association) ( also in titles) membre m (of de)3) GB University ( lecturer) membre du corps enseignant d'un collège universitaire; ( governor) membre du comité de direction d'un collège universitaire4) US ( researcher) universitaire mf titulaire d'une bourse de recherche2.noun modifierher fellow lawyers/teachers — ses collègues avocats/professeurs
he and his fellow students/sufferers — lui et les autres étudiants/malades
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2 countryman
feminine - countrywoman; noun (a person born in the same country as another: Churchill and Chamberlain were fellow countrymen.) compatriote
См. также в других словарях:
fellow — The original sense of this word was business partner, but by the fourteenth century it also had the meaning of companion in a more general sense. It became the usual way of addressing a male servant, and at first would have been thought to be… … A dictionary of epithets and terms of address
fellow */*/ — I UK [ˈfeləʊ] / US [ˈfeloʊ] noun [countable] Word forms fellow : singular fellow plural fellows 1) a) old fashioned a man a nice young fellow b) used for talking to a man in a friendly way My dear fellow, how are you? 2) a member of a… … English dictionary
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fellow — fel|low1 [ˈfeləu US lou] n [: Old English; Origin: feolaga partner ] 1.) old fashioned a man ▪ Paul s an easy going sort of fellow. 2.) sb s fellows BrE old fashioned people that you work with, study with, or who are in the same situation as you… … Dictionary of contemporary English
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