NO.
You are a scholar and a gentleman, both smart and kind. He was the brightest scholar at the university.
I heard it was from a Play and the line goes: You are a Gentleman and a scholar, a fine judge of whiskey and women and there are dam few of us left.
The usual Latin translation of "gentleman" is generosus, which means a man of good family (from genus, generis, "race, stock").
He is obviously a gentleman and a scholar.A marine scholar will remain alert to coastal conditions.
The Latin equivalent of 'Always a gentleman' is Semper homo generosus. In the word-by-word translation, the adverb 'semper' means 'always'. The noun 'homo' means 'man'. The adjective 'generosus' means 'generous'.
The scholar that encouraged Europeans to search for Latin works in Monasteries was Petrarch.
It's from the Catcher in the Rye. Although it was indeed used there, it's a phrase that's been knocking around the British Isles for centuries - both Burns and Wordsworth have used it, amongst others. Long ago, both notions (that of being a scholar, and that of being a gentleman) were most worthy ideals. Thus this doubling of 'worthiness' was really heaping praise upon someone.
charming gentleman
The term "scholar" was derived from the Latin word "scholaris," which means "student" or "pupil."
Kolej Sultan Abdul Hamid's motto is 'Scholar, Sportsman, Gentleman'.
«quel monsieur!» or «quel gentleman!»