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Fellow   /fˈɛloʊ/   Listen
Fellow

noun
1.
A boy or man.  Synonyms: blighter, bloke, chap, cuss, fella, feller, gent, lad.  "There's a fellow at the door" , "He's a likable cuss" , "He's a good bloke"
2.
A friend who is frequently in the company of another.  Synonyms: associate, companion, comrade, familiar.  "Comrades in arms"
3.
A person who is member of one's class or profession.  Synonyms: colleague, confrere.  "He sent e-mail to his fellow hackers"
4.
One of a pair.  Synonym: mate.  "One eye was blue but its fellow was brown"
5.
A member of a learned society.
6.
An informal form of address for a man.  Synonyms: buster, dude.  "Hey buster, what's up?"
7.
A man who is the lover of a girl or young woman.  Synonyms: beau, boyfriend, swain, young man.



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"Fellow" Quotes from Famous Books



... old fellow had fallen as if struck by apoplexy. Next, he understood that she was not dead, but she might be. At last, he had put on his blouse, taken his hat, fastened his spurs to his boots, and set out at full speed; and the whole of the way old Rouault, panting, was torn by anguish. Once ...
— Madame Bovary • Gustave Flaubert

... universal divine love revealed in the heart of Jesus, he had his personal human friendships. A philanthropist may give his whole life to the good of his fellow-men, to their uplifting, their advancement, their education; to the liberation of the enslaved; to work among and in behalf of the poor, the sick, or the fallen. All suffering humanity has its interest for him, and makes appeal to his compassion. Yet amid the world of those whom ...
— Personal Friendships of Jesus • J. R. Miller

... enjoyment of that luxury, "A Taste of Austrian Jails," already related in these pages, I met with a man whose whole life would seem to signify perversion; a "dirty, villanous-looking fellow, with but one eye, and very little light in that." A first glance at this fellow would call up the reflection, "Here is the result of bad education, and bad example, induced perhaps by natural misfortunes, but the inevitable growth of filth and ...
— A Tramp's Wallet - stored by an English goldsmith during his wanderings in Germany and France • William Duthie

... of the war, she had married a young soldier, the son of family friends, like-minded with her own people, a modest, inarticulate fellow, who had been killed at Festubert. She had loved him—oh, yes, she had loved him. But sometimes, looking back, she was troubled to feel how shadowy he had become to her. Not in the region of emotion. She had pined for his fondness all these years; she pined for it ...
— Helena • Mrs. Humphry Ward

... "This fellow has something in him after all," was the involuntary reflection that rose to the other's mind. The effect was, however, not very beneficial to his own manner. Instead of having the effect of impressing upon Stevens the necessity of working ...
— Charlemont • W. Gilmore Simms


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