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View synonyms for provost

provost

[ proh-vohst, prov-uhstin military usage, proh-voh ]

noun

  1. a person appointed to superintend or preside.
  2. an administrative officer in any of various colleges and universities who holds high rank and is concerned with the curriculum, faculty appointments, etc.
  3. Ecclesiastical. the chief dignitary of a cathedral or collegiate church.
  4. the steward or bailiff of a medieval manor or an officer of a medieval administrative district.
  5. the mayor of a municipality in Scotland.
  6. Obsolete. a prison warden.


provost

/ ˈprɒvəst /

noun

  1. an appointed person who superintends or presides
  2. the head of certain university colleges or schools
  3. (in Scotland) the chairman and civic head of certain district councils or (formerly) of a burgh council Compare convener
  4. Church of England the senior dignitary of one of the more recent cathedral foundations
  5. RC Church
    1. the head of a cathedral chapter in England and some other countries
    2. (formerly) the member of a monastic community second in authority under the abbot
  6. (in medieval times) an overseer, steward, or bailiff in a manor
  7. obsolete.
    a prison warder
  8. prəˈvəʊ military a military policeman
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Other Words From

  • provost·ship noun
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Word History and Origins

Origin of provost1

before 900; Middle English; Old English profost < Medieval Latin prōpositus abbot, prior, provost, literally, (one) placed before, Latin: past participle of prōpōnere. See pro- 1, posit
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Word History and Origins

Origin of provost1

Old English profost, from Medieval Latin prōpositus placed at the head (of), from Latin praepōnere to place first, from prae- before + pōnere to put
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Example Sentences

In Edinburgh, First Minister John Swinney was joined by veterans and the city’s lord provost in laying a wreath at the Stone of Remembrance outside the city chambers.

From BBC

Only mentioned and not seen so far in the series, her sister is a Yale provost and will appear late in this season.

“I look at it as going from an age of resilience to an era of hope,” said Oliver M. O’Reilly, vice provost for undergraduate education.

UC Davis has also stepped up outreach to transfer applicants, expanding its work with community colleges, said Malisa Lee, vice provost of enrollment management.

She is the child of academics — her mother is a marine molecular biologist and provost at UC San Diego, her father an aerospace engineer and lecturer at San Diego State University.

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