A person, especially a physician, dentist, or veterinarian, trained in the healing arts and licensed to practice.
A person who has earned the highest academic degree awarded by a college or university in a specified discipline.
A person awarded an honorary degree by a college or university.
Abbr. Dr. Used as a title and form of address for a person holding the degree of doctor.
Roman Catholic Church An eminent theologian.
A practitioner of folk medicine or folk magic.
A rig or device contrived for remedying an emergency situation or for doing a special task.
Any of several brightly colored artificial flies used in fly fishing.
v.
doc·tored, doc·tor·ing, doc·torsInformal
v.
tr.
Informal To give medical treatment to: "[He] does more than practice medicine. He doctors people. There's a difference"(Charles Kuralt).
To repair, especially in a makeshift manner; rig.
To falsify or change in such a way as to make favorable to oneself: doctored the evidence.
To add ingredients so as to improve or conceal the taste, appearance, or quality of: doctor the soup with a dash of sherry. See Synonyms at adulterate.
To alter or modify for a specific end: doctored my standard speech for the small-town audience.
Baseball To deface or apply a substance to (the ball): was ejected because he doctored the ball with a piece of sandpaper.
v.
intr.Informal To practice medicine.
[Middle English, an expert, authority, from Old French docteur, from Latin doctor, teacher, from docēre, to teach; see dek- in Indo-European roots.] doc'tor·al adj., doc'tor·ly adj.