出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/02/04 01:16 UTC 版)
Borrowed from Latin magister (“a master, chief, head, superior, director, teacher, etc.”), from magis (“more or great”) + -ter. Doublet of maestro, master, and meister.
magister (plural magisters)
māgister m
From Proto-Italic *magisteros. Equivalent to magis (“more or great”) + Proto-Indo-European *-teros. Compare minister.
magister m (genitive magistrī, feminine magistra); second declension
Second-declension noun (nominative singular in -er).
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | magister | magistrī |
| genitive | magistrī | magistrōrum |
| dative | magistrō | magistrīs |
| accusative | magistrum | magistrōs |
| ablative | magistrō | magistrīs |
| vocative | magister | magistrī |
From Vulgar Latin *majester, *majestru:
From Vulgar Latin *maester:
From magister:
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a doctor
the lecturer
an apprentice-student
the academic world