A Collection of College Words and Customs eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 623 pages of information about A Collection of College Words and Customs.

A Collection of College Words and Customs eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 623 pages of information about A Collection of College Words and Customs.

Troy, N.Y., February 2, 1856.

A COLLECTION OF COLLEGE WORDS AND CUSTOMS.

A.

A.B.  An abbreviation for Artium Baccalaureus, Bachelor of Arts.  The first degree taken by students at a college or university.  It is usually written B.A., q.v.

ABSIT.  Latin; literally, let him be absent; leave of absence from commons, given to a student in the English universities.—­Gradus ad Cantab.

ACADEMIAN.  A member of an academy; a student in a university or college.

Academic.  A student in a college or university.

A young academic coming into the country immediately after this great competition, &c.—­Forby’s Vocabulary, under Pin-basket.

A young academic shall dwell upon a journal that treats of trade, and be lavish in the praise of the author; while persons skilled in those subjects hear the tattle with contempt.—­Watts’s Improvement of the Mind.

ACADEMICALS.  In the English universities, the dress peculiar to the students and officers.

I must insist on your going to your College and putting on your academicals.—­The Etonian, Vol.  II. p. 382.

The Proctor makes a claim of 6s. 8d. on every undergraduate whom he finds inermem, or without his academicals.—­Gradus ad Cantab., p. 8.

If you say you are going for a walk, or if it appears likely, from the time and place, you are allowed to pass, otherwise you may be sent back to college to put on your academicals.—­Collegian’s Guide, p. 177.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT.  At Harvard College, every student admitted upon examination, after giving a bond for the payment of all college dues, according to the established laws and customs, is required to sign the following acknowledgment, as it is called:—­“I acknowledge that, having been admitted to the University at Cambridge, I am subject to its laws.”  Thereupon he receives from the President a copy of the laws which he has promised to obey.—­Laws Univ. of Cam., Mass., 1848, p. 13.

ACT.  In English universities, a thesis maintained in public by a candidate for a degree, or to show the proficiency of a student.—­Webster.

The student proposes certain questions to the presiding officer of the schools, who then nominates other students to oppose him.  The discussion is syllogistical and in Latin and terminates by the presiding officer questioning the respondent, or person who is said to keep the act, and his opponents, and dismissing them with some remarks upon their respective merits.—­Brande.

The effect of practice in such matters may be illustrated by the habit of conversing in Latin, which German students do much more readily than English, simply because the former practise it, and hold public disputes in Latin, while the latter have long left off “keeping Acts,” as the old public discussions required of candidates for a degree used to be called.—­Bristed’s Five Years in an Eng.  Univ., Ed. 2d, p. 184.

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A Collection of College Words and Customs from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.