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All faculty synonyms

facΒ·ulΒ·ty
F f

noun faculty

  • department β€” A department is one of the sections in an organization such as a government, business, or university. A department is also one of the sections in a large shop.
  • university β€” an institution of learning of the highest level, having a college of liberal arts and a program of graduate studies together with several professional schools, as of theology, law, medicine, and engineering, and authorized to confer both undergraduate and graduate degrees. Continental European universities usually have only graduate or professional schools.
  • personnel β€” a body of persons employed in an organization or place of work.
  • staff β€” a group of persons, as employees, charged with carrying out the work of an establishment or executing some undertaking.
  • institute β€” to set up; establish; organize: to institute a government.
  • body β€” Your body is all your physical parts, including your head, arms, and legs.
  • corps β€” A corps is a part of the army which has special duties.
  • society β€” an organized group of persons associated together for religious, benevolent, cultural, scientific, political, patriotic, or other purposes.
  • clinic β€” A clinic is a building where people go to receive medical advice or treatment.
  • college β€” A college is an institution where students study after they have left school.
  • organization β€” the act or process of organizing.
  • literati β€” Well-educated people who are interested in literature.
  • academics β€” of or relating to a college, academy, school, or other educational institution, especially one for higher education: academic requirements.
  • researchers β€” diligent and systematic inquiry or investigation into a subject in order to discover or revise facts, theories, applications, etc.: recent research in medicine.
  • dexterity β€” Dexterity is skill in using your hands, or sometimes your mind.
  • bent β€” Bent is the past tense and past participle of bend.
  • adroitness β€” expert or nimble in the use of the hands or body.
  • facility β€” Often, facilities. something designed, built, installed, etc., to serve a specific function affording a convenience or service: transportation facilities; educational facilities; a new research facility. something that permits the easier performance of an action, course of conduct, etc.: to provide someone with every facility for accomplishing a task; to lack facilities for handling bulk mail.
  • intelligence β€” capacity for learning, reasoning, understanding, and similar forms of mental activity; aptitude in grasping truths, relationships, facts, meanings, etc.
  • peculiarity β€” a trait, manner, characteristic, or habit that is odd or unusual.
  • aptitude β€” Someone's aptitude for a particular kind of work or activity is their ability to learn it quickly and to do it well.
  • sense β€” any of the faculties, as sight, hearing, smell, taste, or touch, by which humans and animals perceive stimuli originating from outside or inside the body: My sense of smell tells me that dinner is ready.
  • cleverness β€” mentally bright; having sharp or quick intelligence; able.
  • quality β€” an essential or distinctive characteristic, property, or attribute: the chemical qualities of alcohol.
  • strength β€” the quality or state of being strong; bodily or muscular power; vigor.
  • capacity β€” The capacity of a container is its volume, or the amount of liquid it can hold, measured in units such as litres or gallons.
  • genius β€” an exceptional natural capacity of intellect, especially as shown in creative and original work in science, art, music, etc.: the genius of Mozart. Synonyms: intelligence, ingenuity, wit; brains.
  • propensity β€” a natural inclination or tendency: a propensity to drink too much.
  • pistol β€” a short firearm intended to be held and fired with one hand.
  • proclivity β€” natural or habitual inclination or tendency; propensity; predisposition: a proclivity to meticulousness.
  • power β€” a heavy blow or a loud, explosive noise.
  • reason β€” a basis or cause, as for some belief, action, fact, event, etc.: the reason for declaring war.
  • penchant β€” a strong inclination, taste, or liking for something: a penchant for outdoor sports.
  • instinct β€” an inborn pattern of activity or tendency to action common to a given biological species.
  • forte β€” a passage that is loud and played with force or is marked to be so. Abbreviation: f.
  • knack β€” a special skill, talent, or aptitude: He had a knack for saying the right thing.
  • readiness β€” the condition of being ready.
  • talent β€” a special natural ability or aptitude: a talent for drawing.
  • gift β€” gamete intrafallopian transfer: a laparoscopic process in which eggs are retrieved from an ovary by aspiration and inserted, along with sperm, into the fallopian tube of another woman.
  • aptness β€” inclined; disposed; given; prone: too apt to slander others.
  • capability β€” If you have the capability or the capabilities to do something, you have the ability or the qualities that are necessary to do it.
  • turn β€” to cause to move around on an axis or about a center; rotate: to turn a wheel.
  • nose β€” the part of the face or facial region in humans and certain animals that contains the nostrils and the organs of smell and functions as the usual passageway for air in respiration: in humans it is a prominence in the center of the face formed of bone and cartilage, serving also to modify or modulate the voice.
  • leaning β€” the act or state of leaning; inclination: The tower has a pronounced lean.
  • predilection β€” a tendency to think favorably of something in particular; partiality; preference: a predilection for Bach.
  • property β€” that which a person owns; the possession or possessions of a particular owner: They lost all their property in the fire.
  • flair β€” a natural talent, aptitude, or ability; bent; knack: a flair for rhyming.
  • wits β€” the keen perception and cleverly apt expression of those connections between ideas that awaken amusement and pleasure. Synonyms: drollery, facetiousness, waggishness, repartee.
  • professorate β€” the office or the period of service of a professor.
  • endowment β€” The action of endowing something or someone.
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