Censor Explained
Censor may refer to:
Common meanings
- Censoring (statistics), the situation when the value of an observation is only partially known
- Censorship, the control of speech and other forms of human expression
- Census, taken in Ancient Rome by a censor
People with the name
- Cato the Elder, also known as Cato the Censor (Marcus Porcius Cato, 234–149 BC), a Roman statesman
- Yair Censor (born 1943), Israeli mathematician
Organizations
Titles
- Censor (Christ Church, Oxford), a student of Christ Church, Oxford undertaking disciplinary duties assigned to deans of other colleges
- Censor, the title of the head of the former Fitzwilliam House; see List of Masters of Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge
- Censor of St Cuthbert's Society, employed by University of Durham to oversee Society members
- Censor Librorum, an expert called on to advise the bishop of a diocese whether or not to grant an imprimatur
- Chief Censor of New Zealand, the head of the government's Office of Film and Literature Classification
- Roman censor, a magistrate for maintaining the census, supervising public morality, etc.
Arts, entertainment, and media
See also
- Censer, a small metal or stone dish used for burning incense
- Censure, a formal reprimand
- Census,
- Senser,
- Sensor, a device or organ that detects or senses a signal or its environment