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FAQ and Terminology

Common Fraternity & Sorority Terms

  • Active: An initiated, dues-paying member who is enrolled in the university.
  • Badge: A “pin” worn by fully-initiated members of each fraternity or sorority that carries its official insignia.
  • Bid: A formal invitation to join a fraternity or sorority.
  • Big: Nickname for big sister or brother, a mentor assigned to a new member. Many organizations have special names for these pairings.
  • Chapter: A membership unit of a national or international sorority or fraternity.
  • Charter: The official document drafted by an Inter/National fraternity or sorority that allows for the creation of a local chapter that is affiliated with a college or university campus.
  • Class or “New Member Class”: The group of new members that will be going through the New Member Program and Initiation together. Formerly called a pledge class, this term is still used among the fraternities.
  • Crest: Insignia used by sorority and fraternity members. Most Greek organizations reserve the crest for initiated members only. Each crest has hidden, secret meanings behind it. Also known as a coat or arms or shield.
  • Dues: The monetary costs of membership in a fraternity or sorority. These fees are used to cover the costs of operation, formal events, social activities, and other events, depending on the organization.
  • Fraternity/Sorority:  A group of individuals bound together by ritual, common ideals, and a strong bond of friendship and brotherhood or sisterhood. (The term "frat" should not be used when referring to a fraternity).
  • Founders Day: An event celebrated by fraternities and sororities to highlight the founding of their organization and celebrate its history. It's not necessarily held on the day the organization was founded.
  • Grad:  A member of the organization that has graduated from college and continues to stay active with the organization by way of a graduate or alumni chapter.
  • Infraction:  Infractions can be given to any Panhellenic or IFC organization that violates the rules of the recruitment or rush process.
  • Initiation:  The traditional ritual or formal ceremony of induction, which marks the transition to full membership of a fraternity or sorority.
  • Interfraternity Council (IFC): The governing body for all men's social fraternities on campus.
  • Legacy:  To be a legacy means that you have an older family member (brother, sister, mother, father, grandmother, or grandfather) who was a member of a Greek organization.
  • National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC): The governing body for all historically-black fraternities and sororities (known as the "Divine Nine") on campus.
  • Panhellenic Council: The governing body for all women's sororities on campus.
  • Potential New Member (PNM):  PNM stands for Potential New Member and is used by the Panhellenic Council to describe all those women that have the potential to go through formal recruitment. This includes incoming freshmen and upperclassmen that have not joined a Panhellenic sorority.
  • Ritual: The traditional rites and ceremonies of a fraternity or sorority; these are almost always private and known only to initiated members of a fraternal organization.
  • United Greek Council: The governing body for our cultural and religious organizations on campus.
  • Alumnus: An initiated member of a fraternity who has graduated from college and is no longer an active member (plural: Alumni).
  • Brother:  The term used by members of men's fraternities when referring to each other.
  • Neophyte:  A new member of an organization who has completed the new member process, but not yet been initiated.
  • Open Recruitment: A designated recruitment period during which each of the men’s fraternal organizations in the IFC host recruitment events at their own houses. This type of recruitment is considered “informal” because potential members need not follow a designated schedule.
  • Rush: IFC's recruitment/intake process.
  • Rushee: Man going through the rush process.
  • Cross:  Initiated, at the end of the recruitment period after being evaluated by the organization the aspirant is seeking. The new member then "crosses" over from a pledge to a new member.
  • Dropping Line:  To quit the process of becoming a member.
  • Frat/Brother: The term NPHC fraternity men use to refer to each other within their organization.
  • Membership Intake Process (M.I.P.): The process adopted by the NPHC and all of its members in the early 1990's to put an end to dangerous rites of passage practices and hazing. (Hazing is illegal in ALL our organizations AND in the United States courts of law).
  • Nalia or Perry:  Two abbreviated terms for paraphernalia like shirts, paddles, license plates, jewelry, etc. Abbreviations differ regionally.
  • Neo:  An abbreviated term for the Greek word Neophyte, meaning beginner. A neophyte is someone who is new to the organization.
  • On Yard:  An organization that has active status on campus.
  • Probate:  Official public display of initiation often in the form of a step. This is the first time when newly initiated members of each fraternity/sorority are revealed to the rest of campus.
  • Stepping: A creative form of artistic dance and musical entertainment unique to some culturally-based fraternities and sororities, especially those of historically African-American heritage.
  • Sister/Soror: The term NPHC sorority women use to refer to one another within their organization.
  • Stroll: An informal form of stepping.
  • Alumna: An initiated member of a sorority who has graduated from college and is no longer an active member (plural: Alumnae).
  • Potential New Member (PNM):  PNM stands for Potential New Member and is used by the Panhellenic Council to describe all those women that have the potential to go through formal recruitment. This includes incoming freshmen and upperclassmen that have not joined a Panhellenic sorority.
  • Recruitment: The Panhellenic Council's intake process. There is a formal recruitment week for women every fall, but some sororities may schedule an informal recruitment in the spring as necessary.
  • Recruitment Counselor (RCs): RCs are members of a Panhellenic sorority that have disaffiliated from their sorority to help with formal recruitment in the fall. Once disaffiliation occurs (one month before recruitment), that sorority woman is no longer allowed to state which of the 11 Panhellenic sororities she belongs to and instead she is known as a "Recruitment Counselor." During fall recruitment, RCs assist PNMs going through the recruitment process. It is their job to answer questions and help guide PNMs into the sorority that is right for them. The disaffiliation process helps to provide a more unbiased front for the girls.
  • Sister:  The term used by members of sororities when referring to each other.
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