Skip to main content

professorship

/pruh-fes-er-ship/US // prəˈfɛs ərˌʃɪp //

教授职位,教授职务,教授资格,教授身份

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the office or post of a professor.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • UNC demonstrated that point after its journalism school offered Hannah-Jones, an investigative journalist for the New York Times, a prestigious professorship.

  • Young PhD students are no longer looking for professorships in the US, he says, while established scientists are now searching for international options.

  • If Follett had been a man, the reception of her book would have amounted to a career-making launchpad, earning her a professorship at a place like Harvard.

  • However, the former UNC student was offered by the university a non-tenured professorship after going through an extensive approval process.

  • Hitting those targets again and again is the key to tenure, the full professorship, hopefully the lucrative lectures.

  • Is it difficult to balance your professorship with your career as an author?

  • The average starting salary for a tenure-track professorship in visual and performing arts is about $50,000.

  • Did Elizabeth Warren, who is 1/32 Cherokee, obtain a Harvard professorship with help from her “minority” status?

  • The talk about a professorship was in her estimation the wayward, humorous whim of an eccentric who was fond of solemn joking.

  • Give the story of his struggles with poverty in exile, his love affairs, his professorship, his marriage and invalidism.

  • As may be imagined, his professorship was not one of long duration, and he soon had few or no listeners.

  • A year later he accepted the professorship of astronomy and physics in the Western University at Pittsburg.

  • The poor cuss sees no chance of getting a professorship anywhere, and is likely to go into the observatory for good.