Dean vs Hean - What's the difference?
dean | hean |
A senior official in a college or university, who may be in charge of a division or faculty (for example, the dean of science'') or have some other advisory or disciplinary function (for example, the ''dean of students ).
A dignitary or presiding officer in certain church bodies, especially an ecclesiastical dignitary, subordinate to a bishop, in charge of a chapter of canon.
The senior member of some group of people.
* 1955 , edition, ISBN 0553249592, page 67:
(Sussex) a hill (chiefly place names).
As verbs the difference between dean and hean
is that dean is {{cx|intransitive|rare|lang=en}} To serve as a dean while hean is to treat with contumely; insult; humiliate; debase; lower.As a noun dean
is a senior official in a college or university, who may be in charge of a division or faculty (for example, the dean of science) or have some other advisory or disciplinary function (for example, the dean of students).As a proper noun Dean
is a title afforded to a dean.As an adjective hean is
mean; abject; poor; humble; lowly.dean
English
(wikipedia dean)Noun
(en noun)- dean of the diplomatic corps - a country's most senior ambassador
- dean of the House - the longest-serving member of a legislature
- All of the switchboard operators had been parties to it, including Marie Willis. Their dean , Alice Hart, collected
