Online Google Dictionary

proctor 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˈpräktər/,
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proctors, plural;
  1. Serve as a proctor

Noun
  1. A person who monitors students during an examination

  2. An officer (usually one of two) at certain universities, appointed annually and having mainly disciplinary functions


  1. invigilate: watch over (students taking an exam, to prevent cheating)
  2. someone who supervises (an examination)
  3. Proctor, an English variant of the word procurator, is a person who takes charge of, or acts for, another. The word proctor is frequently used to describe someone who oversees an exam or dormitory.
  4. Proctor (Dane Whitman) is a fictional character in the Marvel Universe. He is the Earth-374 version of the Black Knight.
  5. Proctor is the remnant of a lunar crater that is located to the southeast of the prominent crater Tycho. It lies just to the north of the huge walled plain Maginus. To the north is the crater Saussure and to the northwest, just to the east of Tycho, lies Pictet. ...
  6. Proctor Crater is a large crater in the Noachis quadrangle of Mars, located at 48° south latitude and 330.5° west longitude. It is 168.2 km in diameter and was named after Richard A.Proctor, a British astronomer (1837–1888).
  7. (Proctors) Proctor (also Austinville or Proctors) is an unincorporated community in northwestern Wetzel County, West Virginia, United States. It lies on West Virginia Route 2 along the Ohio River, north of the city of New Martinsville, the county seat of Wetzel County. ...
  8. A person who supervises students as they take an examination, in the United States at the college/university level; often the department secretary, or a fellow/graduate student; An official at any of several older universities; A legal practitioner in ecclesiastical and some other courts; To ...
  9. The two Proctors (Senior and Junior) are elected each year by colleges in rotation to serve for one year.  The statutes provide that they ‘shall generally ensure that the statutes, regulations, customs, and privileges of the University are observed. ...
  10. an officer of the court, paid a contracted salary to manage the affairs of others, answers to an attorney at common law, or to a solicitor.
  11. legal representatives, usually associated with the ecclesiastical courts, although he sometimes participated in the king's council.  He was the individual responsible for preparing cases.  He was the equivalent of an attorney.
  12. A person, authorized by the school or program to oversee or administer a course that a student completes independently using a prepared curriculum and examinations. 'Proctors' are different than faculty and do not necessarily meet the same qualifications as a faculty member.
  13. A person, often a band parent, who does menial chores at auditions and contests.
  14. A person that monitors test takers during the administration of an exam to oversee that the test environment meets all guidelines and to ensure that the test is completed properly.
  15. An attorney in an ecclesiastical court for proving wills.
  16. A method developed by R.R. Proctor for determining the density/moisture relationship in soils.  It is almost universally used to determine the maximum density of any soil so that specifications may be properly prepared for field construction requirements.
  17. Officials presiding over a number of aspects of university life including discipline, societies and examinations.
  18. The person responsible for administering the Mensa admission tests.
  19. An adult volunteer, educational aide, or teacher who is only allowed to smile and listen to the student read every word aloud during a reading assessment.
  20. a solicitor or attorney in a court, a clergy title, a university official or the person an exam invigilator.
  21. This is the person who supervises students while they are taking an exam to make sure that they write the exam honestly. This person also answers any questions the student might have about the exam.
  22. Invigilate (verb) invigilator (noun)
  23. An instructor authorized to oversee the administration of an examination. Some students who have been approved by a the course instructor to participate in the online education program may be required to find a sanctioned proctor to help facilitate certain tests.