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'professorial stance' is correct and is commonly used in written English
It is often used to describe a person's behavior or attitude, usually a teacher. For example: Mrs. Smith took a professorial stance to address the audience before her lecture.
Exact(1)
Instead, when speaking of Mr. Obama, the Democratic nominee, Mr. Clinton has assumed a professorial stance that sometimes drifts toward emotional aloofness and disregard.
Similar(59)
"This" was Younger's professorial position.
Believing his fellow students have lost their conservatism to a mix of apathy and professorial indoctrination, he has planned a rally for Friday afternoon involving costumes like Dr. Obama (a jab at the president's stance on health care), the Grim Reaper (a less subtle jab on the same topic), and Uncle Sam.
"Almost professorial".
Too stiff, too professorial.
The professorial sea.
Pennington is more professorial.
Her stance is courteously instructive, casually pragmatic and always watchful, which isn't surprising since she has spent most of her adult life in professorial charge of numerous generations of young undergraduates.
Professorial or blue-collar?
Writer listed professorial comments made.
REBECCA MEAD: Obama being professorial.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com