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  1. Dictionary
    soph·o·more
    /ˈsäf(ə)ˌmôr/

    noun

    • 1. a second-year college or high school student: US "her 16-year-old twin sons are sophomores"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. A sophomore is in their second year, either in high school or college. Once you became a sophomore, thinking you now knew everything, you pitied the freshmen for their confusion over how to write college papers.

  3. May 15, 2014 · Sophomore derives from an earlier English term, sophumer, which is a variation of the Greek sophism, “clever device.” (A competing folk etymology holds that it is a portmanteau of sophos, “wise”, and moros meaning “foolish, dull.”)

  4. 'sophomore' is a perfectly correct and usable word in written English. It is typically used in the context of a person's second year of study in school or college, for example, "My eldest daughter is a sophomore at college.".

  5. Aug 14, 2019 · According to Merriam-Webster, sophomore comes from the Greek words sophistēs, meaning “wise man” or “expert,” plus mōros, meaning “foolish.” (Word nerd note: we get the word moron from mōros .) A sophomore, therefore, is a “wise fool”.

  6. A sophomore refers to a second-year student in a four-year undergraduate degree program in a high school, college, or university. It is derived from Greek words "sophos," meaning wise, and "moros," meaning fool, implying an individual who is wise yet still has a lot to learn.

  7. Oct 25, 2017 · And so sophy moore — or sophomore — means 'a wise fool.”" That "soph" also appears in the word philoSOPHy, which means a love of wisdom. And that same root word "moros," gives us the word moron.

  8. adjective Of or relating to the second year of an endeavor, especially of attending a school or college. adjective Being the second in a series. from The Century Dictionary. noun A student in the second year of his college course.