criticism |
the art of making skilled and detailed observations on literary, artistic, or scholarly works. [1/4 definitions] |
erudite |
having or showing a high level of scholarly knowledge; learned. |
erudition |
a high level of scholarly knowledge; learnedness. |
fellow |
a member of a scholarly society. [1/7 definitions] |
isagoge |
an introduction, as to a field of scholarly study or research. |
learned |
well-educated; knowledgeable; scholarly. [1/3 definitions] |
lettered |
educated; scholarly; learned. [1/2 definitions] |
literati |
those who are accomplished in scholarly or literary fields; intelligentsia. |
lucubrate |
to compose scholarly works. [1/2 definitions] |
lucubration |
the result of such study, esp. a scholarly treatise. [1/3 definitions] |
Ming |
the Chinese dynasty of 1368-1644 known for its scholarly and artistic achievements, esp. in textiles, painting, and porcelains. |
monograph |
a scholarly publication by a single author on a specific subject. |
musicology |
the scholarly study of music theory and history. |
part |
a section of a scholarly or literary work. [1/18 definitions] |
pedantic |
making or characterized by an excessive display of learnedness, or overly insistent on scholarly details and formalities. |
pedantry |
the act or practice, or an instance, of flaunting one's learnedness or of being overly insistent on scholarly formalities or details. |
phonemics |
(used with a sing. verb) the scholarly study of phonemes. |
reference |
a footnote or other direction to information in a book or scholarly paper. [1/7 definitions] |
researcher |
a person who engages in systematic scholarly investigation in order to gain knowledge or understanding or to solve a particular problem. |
sciolism |
superficial knowledge or familiarity, used as a basis for scholarly pretensions. |
textual criticism |
the scholarly study of a written text, as to determine authorship or the original or most authoritative version. |