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3.13
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professed adjective [ prəˈfɛst ]

• (of a quality, feeling, or belief) claimed openly but often falsely.
• "for all her professed populism, she was seen as remote from ordinary people"
Similar: supposed, ostensible, alleged, claimed, so-called, soi-disant, self-styled, apparent, pretended, purported, would-be,
• (of a person) openly declared to be.
• "a professed and conforming Anglican"
Similar: declared, self-acknowledged, self-confessed, confessed, sworn, avowed, confirmed, certified,

profess verb

• claim that one has (a quality or feeling), especially when this is not the case.
• "he had professed his love for her only to walk away"
Similar: declare, announce, proclaim, assert, state, affirm, avow, maintain, protest, aver, vow, asseverate, claim, pretend, purport, allege, make a pretence of, lay claim, make out that, let on that,
• affirm one's faith in or allegiance to (a religion or set of beliefs).
• "a people professing Christianity"
Similar: state/affirm one's faith in, affirm one's allegiance to, make a public declaration of, declare publicly, avow, confess, acknowledge publicly,
• teach (a subject) as a professor.
• "a professor—what does he profess?"
Origin: Middle English (as be professed ‘be received into a religious order’): from Latin profess- ‘declared publicly’, from the verb profiteri, from pro- ‘before’ + fateri ‘confess’.


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