academy

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Dictionary:

academy

  (ə-kăd'ə-mē) pronunciation
n., pl. -mies.
  1. A school for special instruction.
  2. A secondary or college-preparatory school, especially a private one.
    1. The academic community; academe: “When there's moral leadership from the White House and from the academy, people tend to adjust” (Jesse Jackson).
    2. Higher education in general. Used with the.
    3. A society of scholars, scientists, or artists.
  3. Academy
    1. Plato's school for advanced education and the first institutional school of philosophy.
    2. Platonism.
    3. The disciples of Plato.

[Latin Acadēmīa, the school where Plato taught, from Greek Akadēmeia.]


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Term used in music for an institution at which the study and/or performance of music was cultivated. The earliest arose in Italy during the Renaissance; at these the classics, philosophy and literature were often studied too. They were widely imitated elsewhere. In Paris, the opera-giving organization under Lully was the Académie Royale de Musique; in 18th-century Germany the term Akademie became synonymous with concert, and in 1791 a choir in Berlin was called ‘Singakademie’. Later the term came to be used mainly for formal music schools like the Royal Academy of Music, London.



 

Society of learned individuals organized to advance art, science, literature, music, or some other cultural or intellectual area of endeavour. The word comes from the name of an olive grove outside ancient Athens, the site of Plato's famous school of philosophy in the 4th century BC. Academies appeared in Italy in the 15th century and reached their greatest influence in the 17th – 18th centuries. Their purpose generally was to provide training and, when applicable, to create exhibiting or performance opportunities for their members or students. Most European countries now have at least one academy sponsored by or otherwise connected with the state. See also Académie Française.

For more information on academy, visit Britannica.com.

 

The original schools of higher Jewish learning, established in Erets Israel and Babylonia, where both the written Torah and the Oral Law were expounded by the rabbinical sages. The earliest recorded mention of systematic "instruction" or "houses of learning" occurs in the Apocrypha (Ecclus. 51:16, 23, 29), where the term "sitting" (Heb. yeshivah) is equated with the Bet Midrash or "house of study" (cf. Avot. 2:7). Owing to its seating arrangements, yeshivah became the standard designation for a rabbinical academy (see below); metivta was its Aramaic equivalent in Babylonia (Yev. 105b). The rabbis affirmed that such academies were already in existence during the period of the Zugot (scholarly "pairs"; second cent. BCE-early first cent. CE), one of whom served as Nasi (Patriarch or president of the academy) and the other as av bet din (head of the great Bet Din or high court). The Sanhedrin of 71 members which originally held its sessions on the Temple Mount served not only as a high court, but also as a center of rabbinic learning and discussion (i.e., as an academy or bet midrash: TJ Bétsah 2:4; Mid. 5:4).

Palestinian (Erets Israel) AcademiesThere is little evidence of organized rabbinic (tannaitic) instruction outside Jerusalem prior to the destruction of the Temple in 70 CE. A minor academy may nevertheless have been founded in Jabneh (Yavneh), a town lying some 25 miles to the west of Jerusalem. According to the aggadah, when the Romans were besieging Jerusalem, R. Johanan Ben Zakkai arranged to have himself smuggled out of the city in a coffin and brought before Vespasian, the Roman commander. Knowing R. Johanan to be a moderate, Vespasian was prepared to grant his request---"Give me Yavneh and its sages!" (Git. 56b). Johanan proceeded to make Yavneh the first and central point in a network of academies spreading from Erets Israel to Nisibis in Babylonia and even to Rome. The Academy of Yavneh, both in structure and functions, took the lost Great Sanhedrin of Jerusalem as its model. Other academies flourished under Johanan ben Zakkai's immediate disciples, notably Eliezer Ben Hyrcanus (at Lydda) and Joshua Ben ḥananiah (at Peki'in); later also under Akiva (Bené Berak), Hananiah ben Teradyon (Sikhnin), Yosé Ben ḥalafta (Sepphoris), and others, down to the Patriarch Judah Ha-Nasi (Beth She'arim). Eleazar ben Arakh founded an academy at Emmaus, but it had to close for lack of students. R. Akiva, however, a towering and legendary figure, is said to have drawn thousands to his academy at Bené Berak. The devastation of central and southern Palestine as a result of Bar Kokhba's unsuccessful rebellion against the Romans (132-135 CE) led to the dispersal of many scholars, some to Babylonia. A period of reconsolidation began with the Yavneh Academy's transfer to Usha in Galilee (c. 140), this northern region of Erets Israel providing a sanctuary for additional schools and sages. The original Yavneh Academy moved from Usha to Sepphoris (c. 200), with Judah ha-Nasi as its president, and there the Mishnah was redacted; ultimately this yeshivah was relocated in Tiberias (c. 235). The succeeding era was that of the amoraic or talmudic rabbis and their academies. Tiberias became the central "workshop" of the Jerusalem (or Palestinian) Talmud. Despite one long period of inactivity (c. 400-520 CE), its academy managed to survive until a century after the Arab conquest in the seventh century. The remaining academies of Erets Israel---Lydda, Caesarea, and Sepphoris---all vanished by the end of the fourth century. In the talmudic period, the functions and authority of the academy were varied. Together with his senior colleagues, the head of the academy formed a supreme court of law before which actual cases were tried and decisions handed down. The head of the academy likewise conferred rabbinical Ordination (semikhah) on deserving students, and until the Jewish calendar was permanently fixed in 359 he determined the beginning of the New Moon (Rosh Ḥodesh) and the intercalation of a leap year. As the supreme religious authority of both Palestinian and Diaspora Jewry, the Patriarch would from time to time send messengers, to convey religious instruction to the communities of Erets Israel and Babylonia, and also to raise funds on behalf of the academies and their students. The amounts received were hardly sufficient for the needs of the hundreds of scholars who, with few exceptions, had to earn their livelihood either as artisans or as farmers, and sessions of the academy were therefore often held in the evening. One exclusive right of the Patriarch, exercised later by heads of the academies, was to enact decrees (see Takkanah). These were designed to provide for new situations that had not been covered by existing traditional law. Scholars of the academies likewise reserved the right to issue prohibitive decrees as a "fence around the law" (see Gezerah). From the third century CE, scholars "went down" to Babylonia, where they transmitted the teachings of the rabbis of Erets Israel to colleagues and students in the Diaspora (see Neụté). This activity proved especially vital as Jewish life and culture in the Holy Land suffered increasingly from the intolerance of Byzantine Christian rulers. Anti-Jewish measures led to emigration, the closing of academies, and the abolition of the Patriarchate in 425. Shortly after the arrival of Mar Zutra III from Babylonia, the Academy of Tiberias reopened its doors in 520. It survived there until 740, when its operations were transferred to Jerusalem, which had been under Arab Muslim rule since 638. The Seljuk conquest (1071), followed by that of the Crusaders (1099), sealed the fate of Jerusalem's revived academy. Well before the 11th century, however, the academies of Erets Israel had been eclipsed by those of Babylonia.

Babylonian AcademiesDespite the lack of conclusive evidence, it seems probable that in the first century BCE there were already schools of higher learning in Babylonia. The

tanna Judah Ben Bathyra I may have established an academy inNisibis during the last days of the Temple (Pes. 3b). Hananiah, a nephew of Joshua ben Hananiah, taught in Nehar Pekod, where he usurped the authority of Erets Israel by announcing New Moon dates and fixing leap years. This high-handed action was nullified, however, by students of R. Akiva who found temporary refuge in Babylonia after the suppression of Bar Kokhba's revolt. Under Rav Shila and Abba bar Abba, the Academy of Nehardea was Babylonian Jewry's spiritual center around 200 CE, contact being maintained with Judah ha-Nasi and the Jewish community of Erets Israel. This Palestinian influence strengthened with the return of Rav (Abba Arikha), who had obtained his rabbinic ordination from Judah ha-Nasi. The new academy which Rav founded at Sura (c. 220) was destined to overshadow Nehardea and to remain active for nearly 800 years. Thanks to Rav's reputation as a scholar, it attracted well over 1,000 full-time students and revitalized Jewish learning throughout Babylonia. Rav's contemporary, Samuel (Mar), headed the older Academy of Nehardea, and these two men dominated the first generation of Babylonian amoraim. Samuel often deferred to Rav, and it was at Sura that most tractates of the Babylonian Talmud were edited. Like the academies of Erets Israel which served as their model, the Babylonian academies had a dual function: each was simultaneously a study center, a bet midrash for the interpretation of Jewish law, and a bet din (law court) that tried both religious and civil cases. Since both teachers and students were unpaid and had to earn a livelihood, those heading the academies lectured in the early hours of the morning and at night, thus allowing time for students to do their homework and prepare themselves for the next session (Shab. 136b). Anyone could be enrolled and at any age, but the highest qualifications were required to be admitted as a teacher. As in Erets Israel, the president of an academy was voted into office by its scholars, his title being rosh (ha-)yeshivah ("head of the session," Ber. 57a), but each appointment had to be ratified by the Babylonian Exilarch. No separate classes were held, all sessions taking place in one lecture hall with the head of the academy standing on a platform and students occupying rows of seats in front of him, sometimes as many as 24 (BK 117a; Meg. 28b). Twice a year, during the months of Elul and Adar, thousands of people would gather at one of the academies to study a talmudic tractate under the rosh yeshivah's direction (see Kallah Months). The Nehardea Academy was destroyed in 259 by Palmyran allies of Rome. Under Samuel's pupil and successor, Judah Ben Ezekiel (c. 220-299), it was restored in Pumbedita, where it remained until the ninth century. From then until as late as the 13th century it operated in Baghdad. Sura flourished especially during the long presidency of Rav Ashi (376-427), under whom it was transferred to Mata Meḥasya. Several factors combined to promote the ascendancy of the Babylonian academies in the post-talmudic age, when (from 589) each presiding scholar bore the title of Gaon ("Eminence" or "Excellency"). Jewish communities throughout the Diaspora directed their questions to the ge'onim of Sura or, in some instances, to those of Pumbedita. This gave rise to the Responsa literature, which included not only queries about ritual practice but questions regarding theology, Bible, liturgy, and the interpretation of passages in the Talmud as well. Thanks also to the ge'onim, a series of Jewish legal codes reduced the Halakhah to a practical guide, unencumbered by talmudic debate. Among these were the Halakhot Pesukot attributed to the gaon Yehudai Ben Nahman (c. 760) and the Halakhot Gedolot (c. 825) of later authorship. There were frequent clashes of authority between the Exilarch and the gaon. Another source of friction, between the academies of Sura and Pumbedita concerned the division of funds for their support which were received from abroad. A question addressed to a gaon from the Diaspora would normally be accompanied by a sum of money intended for the students of the academy and for himself. Ultimately, the problem was solved by dividing the Diaspora into two parts and dividing the funds accordingly between Sura and Pumbedita. The growth of Jewish communities in the medieval West (Spain, Italy, France, and Germany), led by native scholars who had often been trained in the Babylonian academies, brought about a decline in the prestige and influence of these schools. Western communities gradually ceased turning to the ge'onim for instruction and guidance. Before its final eclipse, however, the Academy of Pumbedita had the good fortune to be led by Sherira Gaon and his son Hai Gaon (998-1038), who brought the academy to a final period of glory .For the later academies, see Yeshivah.


 

1. Garden of Akademos near Athens where Plato taught.

2. Place where the arts and sciences are taught, so an institution of higher learning.

3. Place of training in some special field, e.g. riding, etc.

4. Society or institution for the cultivation and promotion of some art or science, etc.

 

Academy (Akadēmia or Akadēmeia; the earlier Greek name was Hekademeia), originally a shrine in olive groves sacred to the hero Akademos (or Hekademos) on the western side of Athens near the hill of Colonus. In classical times it was also the site of a gymnasium, surrounded by gardens and groves. Here, perhaps as early as the 380s BC, Plato established his school, consequently known as the Academy; it survived continuously until AD 529, when the Christian emperor Justinian closed the philosophy schools in Athens. Plato was buried nearby. Sulla cut down the trees during his siege of Athens in 87–86 BC, but they must have grown again, for Horace, who studied at Athens, refers to the ‘woods of Academus’ (Epistles II. 2. 45). Finds on the site in the twentieth century include schoolboys' slates, some with writing on them.

Although the Academy gave its name to a school of philosophy which, broadly speaking, continued to teach philosophy and science in accordance with Plato's own teaching (see PLATO 3), its doctrines naturally changed direction several times before it was closed. For this reason, and for convenience, ancient writers several centuries after Plato divided the history of the Academy into periods designated by numbers or, more usually, by the terms Old, Middle, and New; they did not always agree (nor do authorities today) on where the divisions occurred.

The Old Academy describes the period when the school was headed by Plato and his conservative successors Speusippus, Xenocrates, Polemon, Crantor, and Crates, down to 265 BC. The Middle Academy is the term often used for the period initiated by Arcesilaus (or Arcesilas) of Pitane (c.315–242 BC) who gave the school the Sceptical approach which it kept with minor variations until the leadership of Antiochus of Ascalon in the first century BC. The New Academy, sometimes taken to include Arcesilaus, is more usually agreed to have started in the mid-second century BC under Carneades (d. 129), who developed Scepticism further.

The destruction of the Academy with its library during the sack of Athens by the Roman general Sulla in 86 BC broke the direct link with Plato. Antiochus of Ascalon, head of the (Fifth) Academy from 86 to 68 BC, abandoned the Scepticism of his predecessor Philo of Larisa and aimed to return to what he thought was genuine Platonism by maintaining that there was essential agreement between the doctrines of the Old Academy, the Aristotelians (Peripatetics), and the Stoics. Although not original he exerted great influence; his lecture audience included Cicero, to whom his eclecticism appealed and who later proclaimed himself an Academic (see ACADEMICA). For the development of Platonism after Antiochus see MIDDLE PLATONISM.

Little is known of the Academy in the following centuries until it appears in the fifth century AD as a centre of Neoplatonism, particularly under the leadership of Proclus, who powerfully influenced the form in which the Greek philosophical inheritance was passed on to Renaissance Europe.

 
school founded by Plato near Athens c.387 B.C. It took its name from the garden (named for the hero Academus) in which it was located. Plato's followers met there for nine centuries until, along with other pagan schools, it was closed by Emperor Justinian in A.D. 529. The Academy has come to mean the entire school of Platonic philosophy, covering the period from Plato through Neoplatonism under Proclus. During this period Platonic philosophy was modified in various ways. These have been frequently divided into three phases: the Old Academy (until c.250 B.C.) of Plato, Speusippus, and Xenocrates; the Middle Academy (until c.150 B.C.) of Arcesilaus and Carneades, who introduced and maintained skepticism as being more faithful to Plato and Socrates; and the New Academy (c.110 B.C.) of Philo of Larissa, who, with subsequent leaders, returned to the dogmatism of the Old Academy.


 
A cynical view of the world by Ambrose Bierce


n.

[from ACADEME] A modern school where football is taught.


 
Word Tutor: academy
pronunciation

IN BRIEF: A private school for special training, such as art or music.

pronunciation LeAnn practiced dancing every day to assure her admission to the dance academy.

Tutor's tip: In "academia" or the academic world, you will certainly find a specialized or advanced school known as an "academy."

 
Wikipedia: Academy

An academy (Greek Ἀκαδημία) is an institution of higher learning, research, or honorary membership. The name traces back to Plato's school of philosophy, founded approximately 385 BC at Akademia, a sanctuary of Athena, the goddess of wisdom, north of Athens.

The original Academy

Before the Akademia was a school, and even before Cimon enclosed its precincts with a wall (Plutarch Life of Cimon xiii:7), it contained a sacred grove of olive trees dedicated to Athena, the goddess of wisdom, outside the city walls of ancient Athens (Thucydides ii:34). The archaic name for the site was Hekademia, which by classical times evolved into Akademia and was explained, at least as early as the beginning of the 6th century BC, by linking it to an Athenian hero, a legendary "Akademos".

The site of the Academy was sacred to Athena and other immortals; it had sheltered her religious cult since the Bronze Age, a cult that was perhaps also associated with the hero-gods the Dioscuri (Castor and Polydeukes), for the hero Akademos associated with the site was credited with revealing to the Divine Twins where Theseus had hidden Helen. Out of respect for its long tradition and the association with the Dioskouri, the Spartans would not ravage these original "groves of Academe" when they invaded Attica (Plutarch, Life of Theseus xxxii), a piety not shared by the Roman Sulla, who axed the sacred olive trees of Athene in 86 BC to build siege engines.

Among the religious observations that took place at the Akademeia was a torchlit night race from altars within the city to Promtheus' altar in the Akademeia. Funeral games also took place in the area as well as a Dionysiac procession from Athens to the Hekademeia and then back to the polis (Paus. i 29.2, 30.2; Plut. Vit. Sol. i 7). The road to Akademeia was lined with the gravestones of Athenians.

Plato's immediate successors as "scholarch" of the Academy were Speusippus (347-339 BC), Xenocrates (339-314 BC), Polemon (314-269 BC), Crates (ca. 269-266 BC), and Arcesilaus (ca. 266-240 BC). Later scholarchs include Lacydes of Cyrene, Carneades, Clitomachus, and Philo of Larissa ("the last undisputed head of the Academy"[1]).[2] Other notable members of the Academy include Aristotle, Heraclides Ponticus, Eudoxus of Cnidus, Philip of Opus, Crantor, and Antiochus of Ascalon.

The Platonic Academy may be compared to Aristotle's own creation, the Lyceum.

The revived Neoplatonic Academy of Late Antiquity

See detailed article End of Hellenic Religion

After a lapse during the early Roman occupation, the Academy was refounded (Cameron 1965) as a new institution of some outstanding Platonists of late antiquity who called themselves "successors" (diadochoi, but of Plato) and presented themselves as an uninterrupted tradition reaching back to Plato. However, there cannot have actually been any geographical, institutional, economic or personal continuity with the original Academy in the new organizational entity (Bechtle).

The last "Greek" philosophers of the revived Academy in the 6th century were drawn from various parts of the Hellenistic cultural world and suggest the broad syncretism of the common culture (see koine): Five of the seven Academy philosophers mentioned by Agathias were Syriac in their cultural origin: Hermias and Diogenes (both from Phoenicia), Isidorus of Gaza, Damascius of Syria, Iamblichus of Coele-Syria and perhaps even Simplicius of Cilicia (Thiele).

The emperor Justinian closed the school in AD 529, a date that is often cited as the end of Antiquity. According to the sole witness, the historian Agathias, its remaining members looked for protection under the rule of Sassanid king Khosrau I in his capital at Ctesiphon, carrying with them precious scrolls of literature and philosophy, and to a lesser degree of science. After a peace treaty between the Persian and the Byzantine empire in 532 guaranteed their personal security (an early document in the history of freedom of religion), some members found sanctuary in the pagan stronghold of Harran, near Edessa. One of the last leading figures of this group was Simplicius, a pupil of Damascius, the last head of the Athenian school. The students of the Academy-in-exile, an authentic and important Neoplatonic school surviving at least until the 10th century, contributed to the Islamic preservation of Greek science and medicine, when Islamic forces took the area in the 7th century (Thiele). One of the earliest academies established in the east was the 7th century Academy of Gundishapur in Sassanid Persia.

Raphael painted a famous fresco depicting "The School of Athens" in the 16th century.

The site of the Academy was rediscovered in the 20th century; considerable excavation has been accomplished and visiting the site is free. It is located in modern Akadimia Platonos. The Church of St. Triton on Kolokynthou Street, Athens, occupies the southern corner of the Academy, confirmed in 1966 by the discovery of a boundary stone dated to 500 BC.

Modern use of the term academy

The modern Academy of Athens, next to the University of Athens and the National Library forming 'the Trilogy', designed by Schinkel's Danish pupil Theofil Hansen, 1885, in Greek Ionic, academically correct even to the polychrome sculpture.
Enlarge
The modern Academy of Athens, next to the University of Athens and the National Library forming 'the Trilogy', designed by Schinkel's Danish pupil Theofil Hansen, 1885, in Greek Ionic, academically correct even to the polychrome sculpture.

Due to the tradition of intellectual brilliance associated with this institution, many groups have chosen to use the word "Academy" in their name.

During the Florentine Renaissance, Cosimo de' Medici took a personal interest in the new Platonic Academy that he determined to re-establish in 1439, centered on the marvellous promise shown by Marsilio Ficino, scarcely more than a lad. Cosimo had been inspired by the arrival at the otherwise ineffective Council of Florence of Gemistos Plethon, who seemed like a Plato reborn to the Florentine intellectuals. In 1462 Cosimo gave Ficino a villa at Careggi for the Academy's use, situated where Cosimo could descry it from his own villa. The Renaissance drew potent intellectual and spiritual strength from the academy at Careggi. During the course of the following century many Italian cities established an Academy, of which the oldest survivor is the Accademia dei Lincei of Rome, which became a national academy for a reunited Italy. Other national academies include the Académie Française; the Royal Academy of the United Kingdom; the International Academy of Science; the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York; the United States Naval Academy; United States Air Force Academy; and the Australian Defence Force Academy. In emulation of the military academies, police in the United States are trained in police academies. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presents the annual Academy awards.

A fundamental feature of academic discipline in those academies that were training-schools for artists was regular practice in making accurate drawings from antiquities, or from casts of antiquities, on the one hand, and on the other, in deriving inspiration from the other fount, the human form. Students assembled in sessions drawing the draped and undraped human form, and such drawings, which survive in the tens of thousands from the 17th through the 19th century, are termed académies.

In the early 19th century "academy" took the connotations that "gymnasium" was acquiring in German-speaking lands, of school that was less advanced than a college (for which it might prepare students) but considerably more than elementary. An early example are the two academies founded at Andover and Phillips Exeter Academy. Amherst Academy expanded with time to form Amherst College.

Mozart organized public subscription performances of his music in Vienna in the 1780s and 1790s, he called the concerts "academies." This usage in musical terms survives in the concert orchestra Academy of St Martin in the Fields and in the Brixton Academy, a concert hall in Brixton, South London.

Academies proliferated in the 20th century until even a three-week series of lectures and discussions would be termed an "academy." In addition, the generic term "the academy" is sometimes used to refer to all of academia, which is sometimes considered a global successor to the Academy of Athens.

Academies overseeing universities

In some countries, notably France, academic councils called Academies are responsible for supervising all aspects of University education in a given region. Universities are answerable to their Academy, and the Academies are answerable to the Ministry of Education. (However private Universities are independent of the state and therefore independent of the Academies). The French Academy regions are similar to, but not identical to, the standard French administrative regions.

This is not an exclusive use of the word "Academy" in France, note especially Académie Française.

Honorary academies

See the Académie Française and its many emulators among national honorary academies of strictly limited membership.

Research academies

In Imperial Russia and Soviet Union the term "academy", or Academy of Sciences was reserved to denote a state research establishment, see Russian Academy of Sciences. The latter one still exists in Russia, although other types of academies (study and honorary) appeared as well.

United Kingdom school type

As a British school type, privately funded Academies first became popular in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. At this time the offer of a place at an English public school and university generally required conformity to the Church of England; the Academies or Dissenting Academies provided an alternative for those with different religious views, called nonconformists.

University College London (UCL) was founded in the early nineteenth century as the first publicly funded English university to admit anyone regardless of religious adherence; and the Test and Corporation Acts that had imposed a wide range of restrictions on citizens who were not in conformity to the Church of England, were also abolished at about that date.

Recently Academies have been reintroduced. Today they are a type of secondary school - they no longer teach up to university degree level - and unlike their predecessors are only partly privately sponsored and independent, being partly paid for and controlled by the state. They have been introduced in the early years of the 21st century and though mainly state funded have a significant measure of administrative autonomy. Some of the early ones were briefly known as "City Academies". In February 2007, the National Audit Office published a report about the performance of the first academies (www.nao.org.uk/publications/nao_reports/06-07/0607254.pdf).

In Scotland, the designation "Academy" usually refers to a state secondary school, with over a quarter of these schools using that title as the equivalent of the term "High School" used elsewhere in the United Kingdom.

Notes

  1. ^ Oxford Classical Dictionary, 3rd ed. (1996), s.v. "Philon of Larissa."
  2. ^ See the table in The Cambridge History of Hellenistic Philosophy (Cambridge University Press, 1999), pp. 53-54.

References

External links

Plato's Academy

Modern institutions

See also


 
Misspellings: academy

Common misspelling(s) of academy

  • acadamy
  • accademy

 
Translations: Translations for: Academy

Dansk (Danish)
n. - akademi

Nederlands (Dutch)
academie, middelbare school

Français (French)
n. - école privée, collège, pensionnat, académie, société

Deutsch (German)
n. - Akademie, Fachhochschule, Hochschule

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - ακαδημία, ανώτατη σχολή, (στη Σκοτία) δευτεροβάθμιο σχολείο, (ιστ.) Ακαδήμεια, Ακαδημία

Italiano (Italian)
accademia

Português (Portuguese)
n. - academia (f), universidade (f), sociedade (f) de artistas, cientistas ou literatos

idioms:

  • academy building    edifício (m) da academia

Русский (Russian)
академия, высшее учебное заведение, частная школа-интернат, университет

idioms:

  • academy building    здание школы

Español (Spanish)
n. - academia, instituto, internado, universidad

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - akademi, högskola

中文(简体) (Chinese (Simplified))
学院, 研究院, 大学, 学会

中文(繁體) (Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 學院, 研究院, 大學, 學會

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 아카데미 학원(학파), 대학, 전문학교, 협회

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 協会, 学会, 王立美術院, 権威者集団, 一群の規範的定説, アカデメイア学派, 学苑, 学院, 専門学校

idioms:

  • academy building    校舎

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) أكاديميه, معهد لتدريس الفنون أو علم معين, مجمع‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮מכון, מדרשה, בי"ס תיכון פרטי (ארה"ב), אקדמיה‬


 
 

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