[
US
/ˈtɛnjɝd/
]
[ UK /tˈɛnjəd/ ]
[ UK /tˈɛnjəd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
appointed for life and not subject to dismissal except for a grave crime
an irremovable officer
a tenured professor
How To Use tenured In A Sentence
- Everyone knows that tenured professors hold a lot more job security than untenured ones.
- He gave up a tenured professorship in the animal science department.
- At 35, Professor Woodstock was tenured and promoted to the rank of associate professor at a large research university.
- This blogger claims to be an untenured professor at a school that likes to think of itself as a top ten law school.
- Well, I am a biblical scholar - complete with tenured academic post - and I think your analysis is convincing.
- That not-unique pattern points to the inadequacy of much current nomenclature about part-time or adjunct faculty versus tenured professors.
- Thus, the reappointment contract provides nontenured faculty with no expectation of continued service after the annual contract's expiration.
- It is taking a toll has taken a toll in health and joy of living - in both junior untenured faculty members and senior Full Professors.
- Seems that despite the popular propaganda perpetuated by the corporate media that the academy is a bastion for 'tenured radicals' is nowhere near the reality. La Profesora Abstraida
- She was the first woman to be granted a full tenured professorship in a clinical department at the medical school.