When you say "to your fellow children", the implication is that the person being addressed is a child. Otherwise, the speaker would not use the term "fellow".
The littlest fellow was actually a marmoset.
He left money to fellow actors John Hemings, Richard Burbage and Henry Condell to buy rings to remember him by.
The tone is one of uneasiness.
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A bookish fellow is often called a bibliophile or a bookworm, indicating a strong interest or passion for books and reading.
Bookish is a word meaning "devoted to reading or study." Bookish words could be referring to "big words" or to certain words denoting a field of study.
He was a bookish sort of boy who didn't go outside very often but when he did he was a real pest. He was a bookish sort of boy who preferred to stay indoors and read.
bookish
Frederick William
Fredrick William II
Frederick William II
The bookish Prussian youth who went on to become known as Frederick the Great was Frederick Hohenzollern, also known as Frederick II. After his father's death, he served as the king of Prussia from 1740 to 1786.
Both are important. They each have their place.
Can mean bookish or pedantic. Or as in Don, like a person who is head or tutor at a college
9 10- I believe actually. Or at least I think.
The word "fellow" can be used as a noun or an adjective.