[Ansteorra] hiding mundane
Jay Rudin
rudin at ev1.net
Wed Jun 13 07:43:28 PDT 2007
"Scholar" isn't a title. It's a common English word meaning somebody in
school or somebody studying. Even when it denotes a specific position
(such as the lowest of four ranks in the London Masters of Defense), nobody
would ever use it as a title. If it was ever used as a title, it slipped
by me (and by the Oxford English Dictionary).
There are social titles, like Lord / Lady, Duke / Duchess, Mr. / Ms., etc.
There are vanishingly few professional titles like "Doctor", Professor",
etc. But most professions don't have titles. Therefore most people only
have a social title, not a professional one.
A student would not be called "Scholar Johnson", for the same reason he
wouldn't be called "Sophomore Johnson", "English-Major Johnson", "Halfback
Johnson", "Commuter Johnson" or any other form of a common English word
used as a title.
Robin of Gilwell / Jay Rudin
> For a secular cleric from 14 century Ireland, the title of Scholar was
> the
> first thing that crossed my mind. There were also calligraphers and
> illuminators, also, but I shall have to consult some books to see if
> these
> are ever used as titles-before-a-name.
>
> Si'le inghean ui macAoidh
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