emeritae

English

Adjective

emeritae

  1. feminine plural of emeritus

Noun

emeritae

  1. plural of emerita
    • 1988, Aisenberg, Nadya; Harrington, Mona, Women of Academe: Outsiders in the Sacred Grove, University of Massachusetts Press, →ISBN, page 187:
      And the older women faculty, the emeritae lived around the college and you talked to them and you heard it ... you know, they were just devoted to that place body and soul, and they didn’t care if they made two bent nickels a year, []
    • 1991, American Holistic Nurses' Association, Beginnings, page 3:
      With the help of ever-present chief elder Charlotte McGuire and our headquarters, an updated list of all Board members was developed. Twenty-eight persons who are now emeritae were named.
    • 2007, Aaron, Daniel, The Americanist, University of Michigan Press, →ISBN, page 69:
      In 1939, when I arrived, women made up a slight majority of the Smith faculty. The oldest of the emeritae were such relics as Elizabeth Hanscomb, who had taught one of the first American literature courses in the country some time in the 1890s.
    • 2008, Nochlin, Linda, A Life of Learning, pages 15–16:
      Although by no means a card-carrying feminist—and who was in those days, besides some shapeless, tweedy, old left-over suffragettes among the emeritae?—I knew from that time onward that I was not going to be one of those model domestic women.

Latin

Participle

ēmeritae

  1. inflection of ēmeritus:
    1. nominative/vocative feminine plural
    2. genitive/dative feminine singular
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