English to Arabic Dictionary academician

academician

أكاديمي
definition
noun
Microsoft makes its source code accessible to a variety of customers, partners, researchers, governments and academicians through the Shared Source Initiative.
an academic; an intellectual.
He is an academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences and a member of the Presidential Council on Sciences and Education, and has enormous influence on the selection and training of all Russian space travelers.
a member of an academy, especially of the Royal Academy of Arts, the Académie Française, or the Russian Academy of Sciences.
example
On July 29, 1769, Huet was accepted as an 'academician' at the Academie royale de Peinture et de Sculpture.
The relationship between the provincial 'academician' and his civic community was vital to the success of the format of the academies.
He was a frequent exhibitor at the National Academy of Design in New York City, to which he was elected an associate member in 1851 and an 'academician' in 1854.
He entered the RA Schools in 1789, had a drawing exhibited at the academy in 1790, and was elected a full 'academician' in 1802.
Although he has been elected mayor twice in succession since 1995, Xu is an 'academician' at the Chinese Academy of Engineering, and is still a professor and tutor for doctoral students of the university.
Topgyal, a Tibetan 'academician' of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, was very excited at the news about the successful launch of the manned Shenzhou V spaceship that made China the third country in the world to send a man into space.
The degree may additionally bring together the spectral ends of the continuum of professional life: the 'academician' researcher and the clinician.
In 1901 Lyapunov was elected to the Russian Academy of Sciences in St Petersburg and in the following year became an 'academician' in applied mathematics of the Academy.
In their anger towards the city councilmen, the academicians decided it was at least better that the writing had been done by an 'academician' - even one of the Academie Francaise.
The article quoted Ouyang Ziyuan, an 'academician' with the Chinese Academy of Sciences who is in charge of China's lunar exploration program.
Then in 1841 he was promoted to an ordinary 'academician' at the Academy.
He is an 'academician' of the Russian Academy of Sciences and a member of the Presidential Council on Sciences and Education, and has enormous influence on the selection and training of all Russian space travelers.
The documents speak of the appalling state the Academy of Sciences was in after Razumovsky - ramshackle buildings, destitute 'academicians' who, not unlike their counterparts today, went unpaid for years.
The work of the 'academicians' of Soissons took place in private homes of members in the early years of its existence and there were few occasions at this point for the Academy to be seen publicly as a distinct corps of the city.
At other times, 'academicians' or scholarly researchers have debated it in publications.
The primary reason for this transition is that scholars and 'academicians' in medical schools consider the data important and possibly valid.
The book seems to be directed at 'academicians' , researchers, musicians and conductors who would be performing a particular Beethoven work and seeking to understand the expressive elements in greater detail.
Thick with vital information, the publication serves as an educational resource for 'academicians' , extension workers, health fair presenters, and church and community group workers.
Scholars and 'academicians' offer several remedies: from smaller class sizes, to better teacher training, to strategic funding initiatives.
Membership of the academy confers instant celebrity status, with 'academicians' appearing on television chat shows and in popular magazines.
The visit of the governor of the province galvanized the Soissons 'academicians' into identifying their intellectual interests more carefully and in a more public venue.
But its relevance and application are important for teachers, researchers, writers, scholars, and 'academicians' .
The 'academicians' thus transformed their intellectual studies into civic action and promoted their vision of the value of scholarship and language to the larger community.
The third volume was written by a team of Russian military 'academicians' led by Colonel Professor Valentin Runov, with contributions from officers who had served during the war.
Most heroes, being only mortal, in reality have clay feet and thus are subject to debunking and the type of revisionist history that our modern professors and 'academicians' so dearly love.
‘The journal will be circulated among 'academicians' , researchers and others associated with the tourism sector,’ says G. Chandramohan, Director of KITTS.
Microsoft makes its source code accessible to a variety of customers, partners, researchers, governments and 'academicians' through the Shared Source Initiative.
This debate became public and the 'academicians' engaged in a lively exchange of opinions with members of ‘La petite academie’ in Paris.
None of the parties involved in educational research is apolitical - not tribal communities, tribal governments, federal education agencies, or 'academicians' .
First come the works of art produced by the 'academicians' since the Academy was founded in 1752.
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