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Jackson6612 Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

Honorary Fellow of Cambridge University, Fellow of Oxford University...

0Many times I encounter sentences like:02br
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01font00Honorary Fellow of Cambridge University, Fellow of Oxford University and so on.02font02br
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01b01font00What does 'Fellow' mean in all such kind of sentences?02font02b0-
  

Top answer

0 A Fellow of a college is an incorporated senior member of a college. He has certain rights and duties relating to the college. 0-

  • 0 A Fellow of a college is an incorporated senior member of a college.
  • He has certain rights and duties relating to the college.
  • 0-
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5 Answers
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0 A Fellow of a college is an incorporated senior member of a college. He has certain rights and duties relating to the college. 0-
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0 01blockquote
01cite10Feebs1112cite10A Fellow of a college is an 11font11b10incorporated12b10 12font10senior member of a college. 11b11font10He has certain rights and duties relating to the college12font12b10. 12br
12b
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0 In Oxford, a fellow (also know as a 'don') is a Professor, Reader, University lecturer, Research Fellow or a College appointee who sits on a College's governing body. The Fellows are in effect the trustees of a College.02br
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00The rights are specific to each college, and may be different one from another [in the King's College, Cambridge, only Fellows have the right
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0 Are only ex-students considered Fellows? 0-
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0Hi,02br
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00No. The colleges simply choose them.02br
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00Clive0-

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