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professed
[pruh-fest]
adjective
avowed; acknowledged.
professing to be qualified; professional, rather than amateur.
having taken the vows of, or been received into, a religious order.
alleged; pretended.
professed
/ prəˈfɛsɪdlɪ, prəˈfɛst /
adjective
avowed or acknowledged
alleged or pretended
professing to be qualified as
a professed philosopher
having taken vows of a religious order
Other Word Forms
- professedly adverb
- half-professed adjective
- nonprofessed adjective
- self-professed adjective
- unprofessed adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of professed1
Example Sentences
“The funding freezes could and likely will harm the very people Defendants professed to be protecting,” she wrote.
The Republicans of the modern era — and you can find examples of this throughout the country’s history — have no stand on their professed principles.
“Miracles still happen,” Pellegrino, a professed Catholic, said in a phone interview Wednesday evening.
When situated within this broader context of a professed commitment to scientific detachment, Oppenheimer’s behavior becomes more intelligible.
The budget cuts will undermine the administration’s professed goals.
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