Quizzes & Puzzles23 mins ago
What's a don?
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We often hear of 'Oxford dons'. I assume they are graduates of some sort, but exactly what are they, and where did the tag 'don' originate from? Why doesn't any other university seem to have them?!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.A 'don' is a senior member of a college. This includes the head of that college and any fellows of the college. The term is also used more loosely to include all of the tutors within a college.
The word is derived from the latin 'dominus' (meaning 'lord') in the same way that the spanish word 'Don' (as in Don Juan and Don Quixote) is.
The reasons that the term is only used in relation to Oxford and Cambridge universities are:
(a) these universities are much older than most other universities and therefore more likely to use terminlogy derived from latin; and
(b) these universities are the only universities in England, other than the much more recent University of London, to have a college structure.
Chris
The word is derived from the latin 'dominus' (meaning 'lord') in the same way that the spanish word 'Don' (as in Don Juan and Don Quixote) is.
The reasons that the term is only used in relation to Oxford and Cambridge universities are:
(a) these universities are much older than most other universities and therefore more likely to use terminlogy derived from latin; and
(b) these universities are the only universities in England, other than the much more recent University of London, to have a college structure.
Chris