facultise
Appearance
English
[edit]Verb
[edit]facultise (third-person singular simple present facultises, present participle facultising, simple past and past participle facultised)
- Alternative form of facultize
- 1905, Albert Osborn, John Fletcher Hurst: A Biography, page 33:
- One of the new students, Chew, was facultised to-night by some of the Student Faculty.
- 1980, George Scott Williamson, Innes Hope Pearse, Science, Synthesis, and Sanity, page 203:
- Intuitive wisdom even in scientific discovery may precede facultised wisdom.
- 2000, Nicholas Deakin, Origins of the Welfare State: The Peckham Experiment, page 222:
- The safeguard against the crudity of action of immaturity that might be feared from such conditions, lies in the example of the facultised expression of the more mature.
- 2018, David Kuchenbuch, Pioneering Health in London, 1935-2000: The Peckham Experiment:
- This results in an “order arising out of the capacity of unintimidated human beings facultised to respond to the total situation”