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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
scholastic
adjective
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Mel received an award for outstanding scholastic achievement.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ At various points it is also related to the scholastic distinction between knowledge and opinion.
▪ Chris could come along with them, suitably subdued by the scholastic environment, Louise hoped, to be quiet for a while.
▪ Despite their restrictions on my wearing makeup and dating, my parents supported all my scholastic activities and hobbies.
▪ I was beginning to understand scholastic folkways.
▪ It seemed fruitful to articulate, to probe and carefully render the overlay of my scholastic past and my working present.
▪ My father was dead, and I had logged up too many years of scholastic indifference.
▪ The publication of correspondence between famous people has been used for many years for the purposes of scholastic enquiry.
▪ Working-class families, by contrast, are less likely to provide an environment that encourages scholastic skills.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Scholastic

Scholastic \Scho*las"tic\, n.

  1. One who adheres to the method or subtilties of the schools.
    --Milton.

  2. (R. C. Ch.) See the Note under Jesuit.

Scholastic

Scholastic \Scho*las"tic\, a. [L. scholasticus, Gr. ?, fr. ? to have leisure, to give lectures, to keep a school, from ? leisure, a lecture, a school: cf. F. scholastique, scolastique. See School.]

  1. Pertaining to, or suiting, a scholar, a school, or schools; scholarlike; as, scholastic manners or pride; scholastic learning.
    --Sir K. Digby.

  2. Of or pertaining to the schoolmen and divines of the Middle Ages (see Schoolman); as, scholastic divinity or theology; scholastic philosophy.
    --Locke.

  3. Hence, characterized by excessive subtilty, or needlessly minute subdivisions; pedantic; formal.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
scholastic

1590s, "of or pertaining to Scholastic theologians" (Churchmen in the Middle Ages whose theology and philosophy was based on Church Fathers and Aristotle), from Middle French scholastique (14c.), from Latin scholasticus "of a school," from Greek skholastikos "enjoying leisure; devoting one's leisure to learning," hence, as a noun, "a scholar," also in a bad sense, "a pedant; a simpleton," from skhola (see school (n.1)). In English, meaning "pertaining to schools or to school education" is from 1640s. As a noun from 1640s. Related: Scholastical (1530s in the "relating to a school" sense); scholastically.

Wiktionary
scholastic

a. 1 Of or relating to school; academic 2 (context philosophy English) Of or relating to the philosophical tradition of scholasticism 3 Characterized by excessive subtlety, or needlessly minute subdivisions; pedantic; formal. n. (context philosophy English) a member of the medieval philosophical school of scholasticism; a medieval Christian Aristotelian

WordNet
scholastic
  1. adj. of or relating to schools; "scholastic year"

  2. of or relating to the philosophical doctrine of scholasticism; "scholastic philosophy"

scholastic
  1. n. a person who pays more attention to formal rules and book learning than they merit [syn: pedant, bookworm]

  2. a Scholastic philosopher or theologian

Wikipedia
Scholastic (Notre Dame publication)

Scholastic is the official student publication of the University of Notre Dame. Founded in 1867, Scholastic is the United States' oldest continuous collegiate publication. In its history, Scholastic has served both as Notre Dame's weekly student newspaper and now as a monthly news magazine. The transition from newspaper to magazine occurred after the inception of The Observer, an independent daily newspaper published by Notre Dame and Saint Mary's students.

Scholastic is best known for its collector's edition annual Football Review, printed every February. This issue recaps the Notre Dame Football season with game summaries and in-depth commentary.

Scholastic was named "News Magazine of the Year" in Indiana for 2007 by the Indiana Collegiate Press Association (ICPA). Scholastic has received this award five of the last seven years. In 1996 and 1997, Scholastic was the recipient of the Associated Collegiate Press' Pacemaker Award, given to the best collegiate publication in the nation.

Robert Franken, a 1969 graduate of Notre Dame, has been the faculty advisor for Scholastic since 2000. Franken also serves as the advisor for Notre Dame's yearbook, the Dome, and Notre Dame's literary magazine, the Juggler.

Scholastic

Scholastic may refer to:

  • a philosopher or theologian in tradition of scholasticism
  • Scholastic (Notre Dame publication)
  • Scholastic Corporation, an American publishing company of educational materials

Usage examples of "scholastic".

It has auricular confession, dogmas, and symbols, esoteric and exoteric versions of the doctrine, converts and apostates, priests and scholastics, a whole ritual of exorcism, and a liturgy of mantle.

President Roosevelt and John Burroughs, in advancing such a view, are homocentric in the same fashion that the scholastics of earlier and darker centuries were homocentric.

The use of a peculiar cant phraseology for different classes, it would appear, originated with the Argoliers, a species of French beggars or monkish impostors, who were notorious for every thing that was bad and infamous: these people assumed the form of a regular government, elected a king, established a fixed code of laws, and invented a language peculiar to themselves, constructed probably by some of the debauched and licentious youths, who, abandoning their scholastic studies, associated with these vagabonds.

Of some of the Scholastics we can only say that they took every thing that was worst in Scholasticism and made it worse.

An equal partner in the Tripart which formed the acme of scholastic renown on Ascelius.

But in this affair of almsdeeds it is perhaps well to note that the Scholastics could make this much defence of their vagueness.

When we praise the practical value of the Aristotelian Revolution, and the originality of Aquinas in leading it, we do not mean that the Scholastic philosophers before him had not been philosophers, or had not been highly philosophical, or had not been in touch with ancient philosophy.

In the Middle Ages the sect of the Cathari, the Bogomiles, the famous scholastics Scotus Erigena and Bonaventura, as well as numerous less distinguished authors, advocated it.

His work was the direct preparation for an impartial examination of the history of dogma however partial it was in itself Pietism, here and there, after Spener, declared war against scholastic dogmatics as a hindrance to piety, and in doing so broke the ban under which the knowledge of history lay captive.

Stanhope, Sir Robert Walpole, the great Earl Camden, Outred the mathematician, Boyle the philosopher, Waller the poet, the illustrious Earl of Chatham, Lord Lyttelton, Gray the poet, and an endless list of shining characters have owned Eton for their scholastic nursery: not to mention the various existing literati who have received their education at this celebrated college.

In another of its efforts toward reestablishing a milieu of scholastic tranquillity after decades of chaos and war, Munchen University had recently introduced gowns and mortarboards for both staff and students to wear for major interviews and other important occasions.

I am a nontraditional woman, with a radically liberal outlook, nonmaterialistic values, and an eternally questioning mind that attracts me to scholastic pursuits.

The triumphs in political, civil, church, scholastic, and army life have been attested by such men as Douglass, Bruce, Washington, Langston, Revels, Walters, Turner, Derrick, Grant, Pinchback, Councill, Lyons, Cheatham, White and Dancy, not to speak of a host of younger men of journalistic careers, that, according to opportunity, compare favorably with those of greater reputations.

He did not share the dislike of Aristotle manifested by most of the humanists, for he shrewdly suspected that what was offensive in the Stagyrite was due more to his scholastic translators and commentators than to himself.

Thus it was among the Greeks the sophists, then among the Christians the mystics, gnostics, scholastics, among the Hebrews the Talmudists and Cabalists, and so on everywhere, down to our own times.