What's the difference between academician and academy?

Academician


Definition:

  • (n.) A member of an academy, or society for promoting science, art, or literature, as of the French Academy, or the Royal Academy of arts.
  • (n.) A collegian.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) It is those characteristics that have served them well, as students and as responsible academicians.
  • (2) Factors such as motivation, role models, and exposure to research may help academicians plan strategies to meet the future needs of academic emergency medicine.
  • (3) Infectious disease-trained internal medicine physicians responding to a questionnaire survey (n = 1802) reported minor differences in time spent in patient care versus laboratory-based research whether they subsequently became practitioners or academicians.
  • (4) When the five nominations for the documentary award are announced on 16 January they will be the product of a change in the Hollywood voting system made two years ago and so may reflect a braver attitude from a wider pool of academicians.
  • (5) Linkage of academicians and practitioners with the public in a manner than empowers communities to assess and prioritize their own health problems could foster a strong community-based demand for ethical and humane decision making.
  • (6) The criteria had been previously appraised by 452 "experts"--academicians and practitioners.
  • (7) Through such collaboration, the academician gains immeasurably by being able to study common clinical problems in primary care settings, where they are encountered most often.
  • (8) Approaches to the systematics of vegetative disorders according to Academician G. I. Markelov and those of the authors of the suggested classification are under comparison.
  • (9) As departments of family medicine succeed in recruiting faculty members from the ranks of practicing physicians and from other clinical disciplines, they are faced with the problem of how to help these new members function comfortably and effectively in their new roles as teachers, administrators and academicians.
  • (10) The primary benefits of this program included: rapid and standardized analysis of lavage fluid cell counts for the clinician to use along with historical and other more routine laboratory tests in guiding patient diagnosis and an augmented number of lavage specimens available to the academician for research purposes.
  • (11) The academicians have their sabbaticals to refresh their knowledge and explore new fields; perhaps minisabbaticals should be arranged for both the academicians and the practicing pathologist who cannot be away from his or her responsibilities for 6 months or 1 year.
  • (12) The Center tries to adapt to the changing needs of the potential users of their data, including health planners and policy analysts, and academicians.
  • (13) A mutually beneficial effort between a veterans administration hospital and a college of nursing, the program was developed in response to clinicians' desire for research consultation and academicians' commitment to conduct clinical studies.
  • (14) Three hundred sixty six academicians with professional appointments in physics, psychology, sociology, nursing, and management were surveyed by a mailed questionnaire, the Tenure Decision Factor Inventory (TDFI) composed of Achievement (ACH) Ascriptive (ASCRIPT), Internal Political (IP), and External Political (EP) criteria related to tenure receipt.
  • (15) There exists the pressure for all academicians to pursue funding and publication of research as a major criterion for promotion.
  • (16) With the cooperative and coordinated efforts of nursing theorists, researchers, academicians, and seasoned practitioners, nursing will be able more clearly to define its domain of practice by identifying nursing interventions and the critical and supportive activities that comprise these interventions.
  • (17) The authors point out the outstanding merits of academician N. N. Burdenko in the organization and development of national neurosurgery, and also tremendous successes achieved by soviet specialists of neurosurgery in the diagnosis and treatment of mono- and multifocal epilepsy, cerebral vascular lesions, brain tumors in adults and children, craniocerebral trauma.
  • (18) The success of such scholarly efforts calls for collaboration between nursing education and nursing service, new partnerships between academicians and clinicians, and the development of an array of research participation skills.
  • (19) The medical literature search will retrieve the most unencumbered dermatologic information for both the academician and clinician for getting the day's work done.
  • (20) Academicians rather than community practitioners spearheaded boundary expansion.

Academy


Definition:

  • (n.) A garden or grove near Athens (so named from the hero Academus), where Plato and his followers held their philosophical conferences; hence, the school of philosophy of which Plato was head.
  • (n.) An institution for the study of higher learning; a college or a university. Popularly, a school, or seminary of learning, holding a rank between a college and a common school.
  • (n.) A place of training; a school.
  • (n.) A society of learned men united for the advancement of the arts and sciences, and literature, or some particular art or science; as, the French Academy; the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; academies of literature and philology.
  • (n.) A school or place of training in which some special art is taught; as, the military academy at West Point; a riding academy; the Academy of Music.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Hollywood legend has it that, at the first Academy awards in 1929, Rin Tin Tin the dog won most votes for best actor.
  • (2) The payments were for services ranging from "project management" to "HR consultancy", according to the academy chain's company accounts.
  • (3) But he added: “My concern is that if we are to see a rapid move to a world in which all schools must become academies then there will be an enormous challenge to ensure that schools remain properly rooted in their local communities and accountable to parents.” A spokeswoman for the Department for Education rejected all the criticisms.
  • (4) A teaching union has questioned appointment of a trustee of Britain's largest academy chain group as chairman of the schools regulator Ofsted , in what was a surprise announcement meant to calm some of the internal conflicts within the coalition.
  • (5) Now serves as director of football and director of the academy at Crewe.
  • (6) Do get yourself elected as a governor If you’re lucky, your school hasn’t yet been swallowed up by a private academy chain, and so its governing body still has ultimate power, and the headteacher is accountable to it.
  • (7) In contrast, the 2009 report, "Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and the Environment" , published by the New York Academy of Sciences, comes to a very different conclusion.
  • (8) The material comprised liver and kidney samples collected from inhabitants of the city of Białystok and of its vicinity during anatomopathological examination at the Department of Pathological Anatomy, Medical Academy in Białystok.
  • (9) Good grades in English are also crucial for schools, which face being closed or converted into academies if results fall below government targets.
  • (10) He is an academy product and truthfully we are, and me above all, happy to have him with us.
  • (11) Pulis says the 20-year-old “just hasn’t been at that level to play games, having come from academy football”.
  • (12) 760 patients suffering from acute pulmonary oedema were treated between 1980 and 1986 at the Institute of Anaesthesiology of the Medical Academy in Wroclaw.
  • (13) "Only one bullet that we're aware of hit, the second Australian returned fire and critically injured and possibly killed the Afghani," said Lieutenant General Rhys Jones, chief of the New Zealand Defence Force, who identified his injured soldier as an instructor from the officer academy.
  • (14) A sample of 558 pediatricians selected at random and 385 members of the American Academy of Pediatrics' Section on Adolescent Health (SAH) completed a 41-item questionnaire.
  • (15) The multi-agency review of the circumstances leading up to the killing of the 16-year-old, who was fatally stabbed at Cults Academy, one of Scotland’s highest performing state schools, on 28 October 2015, also concluded that his death could have been avoided had those who knew that his killer carried weapons in school reported this to staff.
  • (16) Construction of the academy was delayed over a dispute between the Raising Malawi charity and villagers who claimed they were not adequately compensated for land.
  • (17) The victories, at the Sony Radio Academy Awards at the Grosvenor House Hotel in central London, will be a boost for protestors hoping to persuade the BBC that the stations should be saved.
  • (18) "The Academy and Medical Royal Colleges are not able to support the bill as it currently stands.
  • (19) Very few have been through a police academy and most are entirely untrained.
  • (20) The Liberal Democrats fought the 2010 election in explicit opposition to free schools and academy plans.