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  1. Dictionary
    confrère
    /ˈkɒnfrɛː/

    noun

    • 1. a fellow member of a profession: "Pooley's police confrères"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. noun. con· frere ˈkän-ˌfrer. kōⁿ-ˌ, kän-ˈ, kōⁿ-ˈ, kən-ˈ. variants or less commonly confrère. Synonyms of confrere. : colleague, comrade. Did you know? Confrere arrived in English from Anglo-French in the 15th century, and ultimately derives from the Medieval Latin confrater, meaning "brother" or "fellow."

  3. It's a fellow worker, a member of your professional group or an esteemed peer. Think of the noun confrere as a very French sounding way to say "colleague." In fact, frere means "brother" in French, so a confrere is like someone who's a part of your professional brotherhood.

  4. Confrere definition: a fellow member of a fraternity, profession, etc.; colleague. See examples of CONFRERE used in a sentence.

  5. noun. [ masculine ] / kɔ̃fʀɛʀ/ Add to word list. (collègue) homme qui fait le même métier que qqn d’autre. colleague. Mon médecin m’a orienté vers un de ses confrères spécialistes. My doctor has referred me to one of his specialist colleagues. (Translation of confrère from the GLOBAL French-English Dictionary © 2018 K Dictionaries Ltd) Browse.

  6. 3 meanings: colleague a fellow worker or member of a staff, department, profession, etc a fellow member of a profession,.... Click for more definitions.

  7. an unrestrained and vigorously powerful response to an attacking statement. TAKE THE QUIZ TO FIND OUT. Origin of confrere. 1425–75; late Middle English <Middle French <Medieval Latin confrāter colleague, equivalent to Latin con- con- + frāter brother.

  8. Nov 26, 2023 · confrere (plural confreres) A colleague or fellow, especially a professional one. A fellow member of a religious organization, referring especially to Catholic religious orders of men.