Definition
A master's degree or someone who holds a master's degree, especially in European educational systems.
Etymology
From Latin 'magister' meaning 'master' or 'teacher,' the same root as 'magistrate' and related to 'magus' (wise man).
Kelly Says
The magister degree varies wildly across Europe—in some countries it's equivalent to a bachelor's degree, in others to a doctorate—which is why international students sometimes get confused about what their credentials actually mean.
Translations
ARالعربية
مُحَرِّر
mu-har-ri-r
CSČeština
magister
ma-gis-ter
DEDeutsch
Magister
MAH-ghee-ster
ELΕλληνικά
διδάσκαλος
di-das-ka-los
ESEspañol
magíster
ma-hee-ster
FISuomi
mestari
mes-ta-ri
IDBahasa Indonesia
mahasiswa
ma-has-sis-wa
IGIG
onye nnọọ
o-nye nn-oo
ITItaliano
maestro
ma-es-tro
KKKK
өкіністі
o-ki-nis-ti
MSBahasa Melayu
guru
goo-roo
NLNederlands
meester
MEES-ter
PLPolski
magister
ma-gis-ter
PTPortuguês
magista
ma-gee-sta
RORomână
maestru
ma-es-tru
RUРусский
магистр
ma-gis-tr
SVSvenska
mästare
ma-sta-re
SWKiswahili
mwalimu
mwa-li-moo
TAதமிழ்
ஆசிரியர்
aa-shi-ri-yar
TEతెలుగు
ఉపాధ్యాయుడు
u-pa-a-dhya-ay-udu
URاردو
مُعَلِّم
mu-al-lim
VITiếng Việt
giáo sư
giao-su
ZUZU
umfundisi
oo-m-fun-dee-see