a man or boy: a fine old fellow; a nice little fellow.
Informal. beau; suitor: Mary had her fellow over to meet her folks.
Informal. person; one: They don't treat a fellow very well here.
a person of small worth or no esteem.
a companion; comrade; associate: They have been fellows since childhood.
a person belonging to the same rank or class; equal; peer: The doctor conferred with his fellows.
one of a pair; mate; match: a shoe without its fellow.
Education.
a graduate student of a university or college to whom an allowance is granted for special study.
British.an incorporated member of a college, entitled to certain privileges.
a member of the corporation or board of trustees of certain universities or colleges.
a member of any of certain learned societies: a fellow of the British Academy.
Obsolete. a partner.
verb (used with object)
to make or represent as equal with another.
Archaic. to produce a fellow to; match.
adjective
belonging to the same class or group; united by the same occupation, interests, etc.; being in the same condition: fellow students; fellow sufferers.
Origin of fellow
before 1050; Middle English felowe, felawe,late Old English fēolaga<Old Norse fēlagi partner in a joint undertaking, equivalent to fē money, property (cognate with Old English feoh,German Vieh) + -lagi bedfellow, comrade; akin to lair1, lie2
Alexander Golding is an MBA fellow at the George Washington University School of Business.
Opportunity Zones haven’t fully reached their potential, but don’t write them off yet|jakemeth|September 16, 2020|Fortune
He even got fellow Canadian Drake to follow him on Instagram.
A Canadian Teenager Is One Of The Fastest Soccer Players In The World|Julian McKenzie|September 16, 2020|FiveThirtyEight
Bill George is senior fellow at Harvard Business School and former chair and CEO of Medtronic.
6 questions that must be answered in the race for a vaccine|jakemeth|September 15, 2020|Fortune
Yelena Ionova is a postdoctoral fellow in quality of Medical Products, University of California, San Francisco.
The ‘inactive' ingredients in your pills could harm you|By Yelena Ionova/The Conversation|September 15, 2020|Popular Science
Varun Sivaram, visiting senior fellow at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy, is the former CTO of ReNew Power, India’s largest renewable-energy company.
To confront the climate crisis, the US should launch a National Energy Innovation Mission|Amy Nordrum|September 15, 2020|MIT Technology Review
On Dec. 22, 1799, Sands told her cousins that she would be leaving to elope with a fellow boarder named Levi Weeks that night.
New York’s Most Tragic Ghost Loves Minimalist Swedish Fashion|Nina Strochlic|January 8, 2015|DAILY BEAST
He has even joked about how his fellow Republicans attack him.
Why This Liberal Hearts Huckabee|Sally Kohn|January 6, 2015|DAILY BEAST
At least 29 fellow Republicans must vote against Boehner for a second ballot to be reached, and that seems very unlikely.
The YOLO Caucus' New Cry for Attention|Ben Jacobs|January 4, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Instead, I spend much of my time criticizing my fellow atheists.
The Case Against In-Your-Face Atheism|Steve Neumann|January 4, 2015|DAILY BEAST
An atheist counsels his fellow non-believers on how not to talk to people of faith.
The Case Against In-Your-Face Atheism|Steve Neumann|January 4, 2015|DAILY BEAST
He was a perfect mountain of a fellow, six and a half feet if he was an inch, with shoulders on him like a shorthorn bull.
Greenmantle|John Buchan
Indeed the words ‘confound the fellow’ were in the minds of the three men.
The Disentanglers|Andrew Lang
So I thought and reasoned; and at last I determined not to go amongst my fellow men, whatever the result might be.
George Borrow|Edward Thomas
I never before saw a fellow who could carry on so many things at the same time and make successes of them all.
Frank Merriwell's Races|Burt L. Standish
Tommy was not inclined to check his pace, but a revolver in the hands of the fellow induced him to do so.
Boy Scouts in the Canal Zone|G. Harvey Ralphson
British Dictionary definitions for fellow (1 of 2)
fellow
/ (ˈfɛləʊ) /
noun
a man or boy
an informal word for boyfriend
informalone or oneselfa fellow has to eat
a person considered to be of little importance or worth
(often plural)a companion; comrade; associate
(as modifier)fellow travellers
(at Oxford and Cambridge universities) a member of the governing body of a college, who is usually a member of the teaching staff
a member of the governing body or established teaching staff at any of various universities or colleges
a postgraduate student employed, esp for a fixed period, to undertake research and, often, to do some teaching
a person in the same group, class, or conditionthe surgeon asked his fellows
(as modifier)fellow students; a fellow sufferer
one of a pair; counterpart; matelooking for the glove's fellow
Word Origin for fellow
Old English fēolaga, from Old Norse fēlagi, one who lays down money, from fē money + lag a laying down
British Dictionary definitions for fellow (2 of 2)
Fellow
/ (ˈfɛləʊ) /
noun
a member of any of various learned societiesFellow of the British Academy