Academes
the campus activity, life, and interests of a college or university; the world.
(sometimes initial capital letter) any place of instruction; a school.
(initial capital letter) the public grove in athens in which plato taught.
a person living in, accustomed to, or preferring the environment of a university.
a scholarly or pedantic person, especially a teacher or student.
noun (literary)
any place of learning, such as a college or university
the grove of academe, the groves of academe, the academic world
n.
“the academy,” 1580s, from phrase groves of academe, translating horace’s silvas academi (see academy); general sense of “the world of universities and scholarship” is attested from 1849. with lower-case letter, academia in the sense of “academic community” is from 1956.
academe properly means academus (a greek hero); & its use as a poetic variant for academy, though sanctioned by shakespeare, tennyson & lowell, is a mistake; the grove of a., however, (milton) means rightly the academy. [fowler]
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