Fel"low (?), v. t. To suit with; to
pair with; to match. [Obs.]
Shak.
Fel"low (?), n. [OE.
felawe, felaghe, Icel. fēlagi, fr. fēlag companionship, prop., a laying together of property; fē property + lag a laying, pl. lög law, akin
to liggja to lie. See Fee, and Law, Lie to be low.]
1. A companion; a comrade; an associate; a partner; a sharer.
The fellows of his crime.
Milton. We are fellows still,
Serving alike in sorrow.
Shak. That enormous engine was flanked by two fellows almost of equal magnitude.
Gibbon. &fist; Commonly used of men, but sometimes of women. Judges xi. 37.
2.
A man without good breeding or worth; an ignoble or mean man.
Worth makes the
man, and want of it, the fellow.
Pope. 3. An equal in power, rank, character, etc.
It is impossible that ever Rome
Should breed thy fellow.
Shak.
4. One of
a pair, or of two things used together or suited to each other; a mate;
the male.
When they be but heifers of
one year, . . . they are let
go to the
fellow and breed.
Holland. This was my glove; here is the fellow of it.
Shak. 5.
A person; an individual.
She seemed to be a good sort of fellow.
Dickens. 6. In the English universities, a scholar who is appointed to a
foundation called a fellowship, which gives a title
to certain perquisites and privileges.
7. In an American college or university, a member of the corporation which manages its business interests; also, a graduate appointed to a fellowship, who receives the income of
the foundation.
8. A member of a literary or scientific society; as, a Fellow of the Royal Society.
&fist;
Fellow is often used in compound words, or adjectively, signifying associate, companion, or sometimes equal.
Usually, such compounds or
phrases are self- explanatory; as, fellow-citizen, or fellow citizen; fellow-student, or fellow student; fellow- workman, or fellow workman; fellow-mortal, or fellow mortal; fellow-sufferer; bedfellow; playfellow; workfellow.
Were the great duke himself here, and would lift up
My
head to fellow pomp amongst his nobles.
Ford.