Glossary entry

English term or phrase:

protégé

English answer:

A protégé is someone that you take under your wing in order to support them and help them develop.

Added to glossary by Yurek
Jan 12, 2009 17:00
16 yrs ago
10 viewers *
English term

protégé

Non-PRO English Social Sciences Linguistics
Sorry for no reference, I know its derivation (from French), however, I want to know its accurate definition or explanation in English, and the difference among apostle, disciple and protégé, whether there are relations with the Bible.

Thanks in advance, I know a little about apostle, disciple and protégé, however, I want further confirmation, whether in English or Chinese.
Responses
3 +6 protégé
Change log

Jan 13, 2009 06:25: Harald Moelzer (medical-translator) changed "Level" from "PRO" to "Non-PRO"

Votes to reclassify question as PRO/non-PRO:

Non-PRO (3): writeaway, Can Altinbay, Harald Moelzer (medical-translator)

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Discussion

Yurek (asker) Jan 12, 2009:
I have known:

Merriam-Webster Collegiate® Dictionary
Etymology: French, from past participle of protéger to protect, from Middle French, from Latin protegere
Date: 1787
: one who is protected or trained or whose career is furthered by a person of experience, prominence, or influence

and

Babylon English-English
n. male who is under the protection or tutelage of another person

Are there definitions or explanations else? Thanks in advance.

Responses

+6
21 mins
Selected

protégé

A protégé is someone that you take under your wing in order to support them and help them develop.

However, while the terms apostle and disciple are frequently found in the Bible, the term protégé isn't used there - or at least not in any of the standard translations.
Peer comment(s):

agree Tony M : Yes, apostle or disciple basically means some kind of a 'follower', while a protégé' is someone who is 'sponsored', if you like.
8 mins
agree Ken Cox : A protégé of someone could also be a disciple of that person (the relationsip between the two terms is inverse). Despite its meaning in the Biblical sense, 'apostle' is often used in current (US) English in the sense of advocate or proponent.
10 mins
agree Alexandra Taggart : 1)"a young protege of a famous artist";2) clever enough to grasp a prominent advanced idea:political protege-http://www.contactmusic.com/new/xmlfeed.nsf/mndwebpages/oliv...
33 mins
agree Gary D : my protege, my apprentice
7 hrs
agree Alice Bootman : Absolutely, and Tony M's addition is also valuable.
9 hrs
agree Phong Le
13 hrs
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Lots of thanks, Armorel :-)"
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