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Wiktionary英語版での「emeritus」の意味 |
emeritus
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/11/23 02:52 UTC 版)
語源
The adjective is a learned borrowing from Latin ēmeritus (“(having been) earned, (having been) merited; (having been) served, having done one’s service”), the perfect passive participle of ēmereō (“to earn, merit; to gain by service; (military) to complete one’s obligation to serve, to serve out one’s time”), from ex- (prefix meaning ‘away; out’) + mereō (“to deserve, merit; to acquire, earn, get, obtain; to render service to; to serve”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *(s)mer- (“to allot; to assign”)).
The noun is derived from the adjective. The plural form emeriti is borrowed from Latin ēmeritī.
発音
- Adjective and singular noun:
- (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA: /ɪˈmɛɹɪtəs/
- (weak vowel merger) IPA: /əˈmɛɹətəs/
- 韻: -ɛɹɪtəs
- ハイフネーション: eme‧ri‧tus
- Plural noun (emeriti):
- (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA: /ɪˈmɛɹɪtaɪ/
- (weak vowel merger) IPA: /əˈmɛɹətaɪ/
- ハイフネーション: eme‧ri‧ti
形容詞
emeritus (not comparable, feminine singular emerita, masculine plural emeriti or (rare) emerituses, feminine plural emeritae)
- (often postpositive) Retired, but retaining an honorific version of a previous title.
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pontiff emeritus
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1823, Thomas De Quincey, “Letters to a Young Man whose Education has been Neglected. Letter V.”, in Letters to a Young Man whose Education has been Neglected; and Other Papers (De Quincey’s Works; XIV), London: James Hogg & Sons, published 1860, →OCLC, page 83:
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I must confess that in such an answer I see nothing worthy of a philosopher; and should rather have looked for it from a literary petit-maître than from an emeritus Professor of Moral Philosophy.
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1903, Peter Albert Petrie, “Christianity and Creeds”, in “Ye Shall Know the Truth, and the Truth Shall Make You Free.”, Cincinnati, Oh.: The Standard Publishing Company, page 120:
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1912, Charles S. Foos, “[Reports of City, Borough and Township Superintendents.] Reading.”, in Report of the Superintendent of Public Instruction of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania: For the Year Ending July 3, 1911 (Official Document; no. 5), Harrisburg, Pa.: C. E. Aughinbaugh, […], →OCLC, page 250:
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Thus far, no teachers' retirement fund, as such, has been established. The board has thus far met this problem by electing teachers unable to perform regular service as teachers emeriti, although this is only a temporary arrangement and committees of the teachers and the board are now considering the feasibility of the establishment of the retirement fund.
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1934 June 5, “Brooks And Foust Resign As U. N. C. Vice-Presidents: […]”, in The Daily Times-News, volume 46, number 83, Burlington, N.C., page one, column 1:
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Trustees of the University of North Carolina today accepted the voluntary retirements of Dr. Eugene Clyde Brooks, vice-president in charge of State College, and Dr. J. I. Foust, vice-president for the Women’s college, and made them president emerituses of their respective institutions at salaries of $4,000 a year.
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1961 November 25, Charlie Wadsworth, “Hush Puppies”, in Orlando Sentinel, volume 77, number 195, Orlando, Fla., pages 4—C, column 1:
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“I think these [parking] lots are the best thing that’s happened to Orlando insofar as the continued growth of the city is concerned. / “They affect everyone, from janitors to chairman emerituses,” smiled [Claude] Wolfe with an obvious reference to First National Bank board chairman emeritus Linton Allen, who was nearby.
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1975 December 24, Sandy Simmons, “Phenix City Overspent Expenditures”, in The Columbus Enquirer, 148th year, number 147, Columbus, Ga., page B-1, columns 3–4:
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According to the recently amended firemen’s and policemen’s retirement act, the auditor said two chief emerituses (one for each department) are currently over retirement age, 65, but their positions are considered active.
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1999 September 22, Joe Murray, “On the Road: Right at home at the First Baptist”, in Longview News-Journal, page 2A, columns 4–5:
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I read in the church bulletin that the preacher of the day, filling the pulpit in the absence of a full-time pastor, was Dr. James A. Langley, executive director editor emeritus of the D.C. Baptist Convention. A title of nobility, editor emeritus is. I expected the best from his sermon. Sure enough, we were in the Book of Micah, Chapter 6, Verse 8, as Dr. Langley noted, often considered “the very essence of the Bible.” “And what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?” The words may appear so simple, Dr. Langley said, “but they are so demanding.” And while not every Baptist preacher would attempt mixing MarK Twain with Micah, such is the leeway granted editor emerituses.
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2003, Linda Lambert, Leadership Capacity for Lasting School Improvement, Alexandria, Va.: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, →ISBN, back cover:
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Linda Lambert is founder of the Center for Educational Leadership at California State University, Hayward, where she is professor emeritus.
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2008, Mary Ellen Lepionka, “Interest a Publisher in Your Manuscript”, in Writing and Developing Your College Textbook: A Comprehensive Guide to Textbook Authorship and Higher Education Publishing, 2nd edition, Gloucester, Mass.: Atlantic Path Publishing, →ISBN, page 53:
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Retired professors emeriti, junior or adjunct faculty, community college instructors, and transplanted or unknown scholars with exotic names, for example, may find themselves disadvantaged in the competition for textbook authorship (though not necessarily for other kinds of books).
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2020, Georg Gänswein, “The Expanded Papacy”, in Michael Miller, transl., How the Catholic Church Can Restore Our Culture, Irondale, Ala.: EWTN Publishing, →ISBN:
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Applied to the decision to resign, I read the formula this way: It was fitting, because Pope Benedict [XVI] realized he was losing the strength necessary for his arduous office. He could do it, because long before, he had already thought out theologically, in a groundbreaking way, the possibility of popes emeriti in the future. And so then he did it.
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使用する際の注意点
- Until c. 1910–1920, both prepositive and postpositive usage was more or less equally common. Since then, more commonly postpositive (e.g., professor emeritus instead of emeritus professor).
- With the rare plural form emerituses, the noun is not pluralized (e.g., professor emerituses, analyzed as professor emeritus + -es). With emeriti, not pluralizing the noun (e.g., professor emeriti) is non-standard.
- The masculine plural forms emeriti/emerituses may be used when referring to mixed (including both men and women) groups. Usage of the masculine emeritus/emeriti/emerituses instead of the feminine emerita/emeritae when exclusively referring to a woman or women may be considered non-standard, but some use, e.g., the title professor emeritus gender-neutrally.
名詞
emeritus (plural emeriti or emerituses)
- (plural emeriti or (rare) emerituses) A (male) person who is retired from active service or an occupation, especially one who retains an honorific version of a previous title.
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1900 September 21, “Dyke-Bridge Proposed. Engineer Santi Wants to Unite Manhattan and Richmond Boroughs—Tammany Men’s Views.”, in The New York Times, volume L, number 15,820, New York, N.Y., page 11, column 7:
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Martin Engels said: “I am not posted on dyke-bridges, but if it is a Dutch scheme there may be something in it. That engineer made a mistake by calling the city officials emerituses. He should not call people names if he wants the Municipal Council to build his twenty-four-million-dollar bridge. If the Tammany organization wants to build a dyke-bridge, I’m for it.”
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1964 December 9, Kenneth Rexroth, “Depersonalized Campus”, in San Francisco Examiner, page 46, column 5:
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Back then, the poet Witter Bynner was invited to give a series of talks. His classes were small. It was beautiful weather. He took them out on the lawn. The faculty never forgot. To this very day you can find snowy haired emerituses toddling about in homspun tweeds who will tell you, “Had a poet here once. Name of Winter, think it was. Took the students out on the lawn.”
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1974 March 30, Adras LaBorde, “Talk of the Town”, in Alexandria Daily Town Talk, volume XCII, number 14, Alexandria, La. – Pineville, La., section A, page four, column 5:
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The Emerituses Are Back / More unfinished business: / The Commission on Governmental Ethics voted this week to look into the “emeritus” pay drawn by five retired state college presidents. The motion to investigate was made by commission member Victor Bussie, state president of the AFL-CIO, who said it was desirable to determine “whether or not university and college funds are being paid to people who are not performing useful work.” The only “no” vote on Mr. Bussie’s motion was cast by Commission Chairman Vanue Lacour, who argued that the code of ethics was never intended to apply to college and university affairs.
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1984 April 8, Leonard Koppett, “An ‘editor emeritus’ may yet produce a ‘pontificus maximus’”, in The Peninsula Times Tribune, page C-3, column 1:
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WHEN IT was announced Tuesday that my title henceforth will be “editor emeritus,” with Mike Kidder taking over as editor of the paper, I received a call from a very high-ranking Stanford official. “I never knew they had emerituses in your business,” he said. “I never did either,” I replied, “but it seemed to hit the right combination of subliminal dignity and overt ambiguity.”
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1984 November 11, Alex Cogan, “Editor’s mailbox”, in San Francisco Examiner, volume 1984, number 46, page B10, column 5:
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You include some comment by Sakharov Institute organizers, but who are they compared to all the “emerituses”?
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1996 May 23, Gore Vidal, “Twain on the Grand Tour”, in Robert B[enjamin] Silvers, Barbara Epstein, editors, The New York Review of Books, New York, N.Y.: Rea S. Hederman, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 6 February 2023, part 1:
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As is so often the case, this particular critic is a professor emeritus and emerituses often grow reckless once free of the daily grind of dispensing received opinion.
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- (rare, plural emerituses) An honorific version of a previous title.
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1961 August 15, Charlie Wadsworth, “Hush Puppies”, in Orlando Sentinel, volume 77, number 93, Orlando, Fla., pages 4—B, column 1:
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NOW THE VENERABLE and distinguished First National Bank bossman has joined a distinguished league. To my knowledge, he shares his honors with two other distinguished Orlandoans — Dr. J. Powell Tucker, pastor emeritus of the First Baptist Church, and J. C. Brossier, editor emeritus of the Orlando Evening Star. And now that Dr. and Mrs. Tucker have returned home from a month’s vacation trip, the good doctor can sit down today with Mr. Allen and Mr. Brossier and they can talk about their emerituses.
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1976, A History of Temple, New Hampshire, 1768-1976, Dublin, N.H.: William L. Bauhan, →ISBN, page 473:
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He was also a visiting professor of chemical engineering, and received an Emeritus in 1967.
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1981, First International Congress on the History of Turkish-Islamic Science and Technology, 14-18 September 1981, page 18:
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After receiving her emeritus in 1976 she has lectured at the University of Berkeley, and University of Vienna.
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1998, Topological Methods in Nonlinear Analysis, page 201:
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Appointed Professor at the Collège de France in 1947, in the Chair of differential and functional equations, that he occupies till his emeritus in 1978, Leray developes till 1950 his ideas on the cohomology of closed continuous maps, fiber spaces and Lie groups (Leray-Hirsch theorem) [12], [13], and continues his work in fluid mechanics by contributing to the theory of airplane wings [11], in the line of Tchapliguine and Prandtl’s work.
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2003, “[1953] Staudinger, Hermann”, in Francis Leroy, editor, A Century of Nobel Prize Recipients: Chemistry, Physics, and Medicine, Marcel Dekker, →ISBN, page 54, column 2:
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In 1926 he [Hermann Staudinger] accepted a position at the University of Freiburg, as Head of the Laboratory of Chemistry, and remained there until his emeritus in 1951.
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2008, Wim Ravesteijn, Jan Kop, editors, For Profit and Prosperity: The Contribution Made by Dutch Engineers to Public Works in Indonesia, 1800-2000, Aprilis, →ISBN, page 553:
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From 1985 until the time of his emeritus in 1994 he was professor of sanitary engineering – particularly in relation to public drinking water supply matters – at Delft University of Technology.
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2008, Arie van Deursen, translated by Herbert Donald Morton, The Distinctive Character of the Free University in Amsterdam, 1880-2005: A Commemorative History, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., →ISBN, pages 108 ([[Inherit or Borrow: 1905-1926] Science] Letters and philosophy) and 219 ([[Christian Scholarship: 1926-1955] Onward along the old track?] Scholarship in the faculties):
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When [Gerhard Herman Johannes Wilhelm Jacobus Geesink] Geesink departed with his emeritus, the Faculty of Letters wanted to make something of it and proposed a successor: [Dirk Hendrik Theodoor] Vollenhoven or J[ohan]. G[erhard]. Ubbink, with special recommendation of the first of these. […] [Cornelis] Van Gelderen was able to depart at last with his emeritus in 1945, [Gerhard Charles] Aalders and [Valentijn] Hepp followed in 1950.
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参照
- ^ “emeritus, adj. and n.”, in OED Online
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, December 2022; “emeritus, adj.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
- ^ “professor emeritus,emeritus professor”, in Google Books Ngram Viewer.
語源
Perfect passive participle of ēmereō (“earn, merit”).
発音
- (Classical Latin) IPA: [eːˈmɛ.rɪ.tʊs]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA: [eˈmɛː.ri.t̪us]
Participle
ēmeritus (feminine ēmerita, neuter ēmeritum); first/second-declension participle
語形変化
First/second-declension participle.
| singular | plural | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| masculine | feminine | neuter | masculine | feminine | neuter | ||
| nominative | ēmeritus | ēmerita | ēmeritum | ēmeritī | ēmeritae | ēmerita | |
| genitive | ēmeritī | ēmeritae | ēmeritī | ēmeritōrum | ēmeritārum | ēmeritōrum | |
| dative | ēmeritō | ēmeritae | ēmeritō | ēmeritīs | |||
| accusative | ēmeritum | ēmeritam | ēmeritum | ēmeritōs | ēmeritās | ēmerita | |
| ablative | ēmeritō | ēmeritā | ēmeritō | ēmeritīs | |||
| vocative | ēmerite | ēmerita | ēmeritum | ēmeritī | ēmeritae | ēmerita | |
派生した語
参照
- “emeritus”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879), A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- “emeritus”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891), An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
- "emeritus", in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition with additions by D. P. Carpenterius, Adelungius and others, edited by Léopold Favre, 1883–1887)
- “emeritus”, in Gaffiot, Félix (1934), Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
「emeritus」を含む例文一覧
該当件数 : 88件
Kayama was a professor emeritus at Tokyo University of the Arts.発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
東京芸術大学名誉教授。 - Wikipedia日英京都関連文書対訳コーパス
In 1923, he became the emeritus professor of Tokyo Imperial University.発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
1923年、東京帝国大学名誉教授。 - Wikipedia日英京都関連文書対訳コーパス
He is an emeritus professor in the National Institute of Polar Research.発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
国立極地研究所名誉教授。 - Wikipedia日英京都関連文書対訳コーパス
He was professor emeritus for both Kyoto and Osaka University.発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
京都大学・大阪大学名誉教授。 - Wikipedia日英京都関連文書対訳コーパス
Kate, professor emeritus of theoretical physics at boston university. theoretical physics?例文帳に追加
ケイトはボストン大 物理学の名誉教授 - 映画・海外ドラマ英語字幕翻訳辞書
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