Institue vs Academy - What's the difference?
institue | academy |
(classical studies, usually, capitalized) The garden where Plato taught. Brown, Lesley, ed. The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary. 5th. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
(classical studies, usually, capitalized) Plato's philosophical system based on skepticism; Plato's followers.
An institution for the study of higher learning; a college or a university; typically a private school.
*
* '>citation
A school or place of training in which some special art is taught.
* '>citation
A society of learned people united for the advancement of the arts and sciences, and literature, or some particular art or science.
(obsolete) The knowledge disseminated in an Academy.
Academia.
A body of established opinion in a particular field, regarded as authoritative.
(UK, education) A school directly funded by central government, independent of local control.
As a verb institue
is .As an adjective institue
is instituted.As a proper noun academy is
(classical studies|history) the school for advanced education founded by plato; the garden where plato taught brown, lesley, ed the shorter oxford english dictionary 5th oxford: oxford university press, 2003.institue
Not English
Institue has no English definition. It may be misspelled.English words similar to 'institue':
inchoate, instance, institute, inactive, instigate, inkstone, instate, incidence, insatiate, inositide, insidiate, instaure, inusitate, insudate, instore, ingotlike, instable, immixture, inchwide, inesite, incaite, ingodite, instaunce, inswathe, inactuate, insuetude, insheathe, inactose, inosite, inaquate, inescate, instyleacademy
English
Noun
(academies)- the military academy''' at West Point; a riding '''academy'''; the '''Academy of Music.
- the French Academy'''; the American '''Academy''' of Arts and Sciences; '''academies of literature and philology.