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adjectives - newly graduate or new graduate - English Language
"new graduate" is correct. 'New' is an adjective which describes the noun, 'graduate'. 'Newly' is an adverb which would describe a verb, but in this case, you need the noun.
Am I a graduate or a Masters graduate? [duplicate]
There area couple of options: It's quite common to say "I have a masters [degree] in XYZ" for an M.A. or M.S., with the "degree" being optional.
meaning - Why do job ads use the word "discipline" to mean …
2022年4月11日 · But recruiting new graduate and recruiting professionals is different. If it is recruiting new graduate it is easy to understand the meaning of discipline as "an area of knowledge or teaching that is studied at a university" from Longman. But the picture I attached is recruiting professionals so using discipline there is bit confusing to me.
Graduate student in or of? - English Language & Usage Stack …
2014年2月22日 · Welcome to EL&U. A native speaker would usually insert an article before major: I am a graduate student with a major in statistics or I am a graduate student majoring in statistics. But note also that terms like major or concentration are not used in every program or in every country, which may be why the OP has asked for a more generic ...
meaning - What is the difference between "graduate students" …
In New Zealand universities, a "post-graduate" student is one earning an advanced degree (masters, doctorate, diploma) in the subject of their undergraduate degree. A "graduate" student has also earned an undergraduate degree but is continuing study in a subject for which they have not explicitly earned a bachelor's degree.
"Will graduate" vs. "will be graduated" vs. "is going to graduate"
He plans to graduate in May. He is scheduled to gradate in May. In May, he will have graduated, assuming he passes all his courses. All of those are fine, and they would be suitable for a formal letter. I graduated from Boston University. I am a Boston University graduate. I have been a Boston University graduate since 1998. Those are fine, too ...
american english - What is a secondary school graduate called ...
2019年6月17日 · In UK we don't have "high school" as a general type of school, although some have that in their name, for example "Stamford High School". So "high school graduate" is an AmE term. In UK students who are at secondary school "leave school". For example "Pete left school at age 18 with three A-levels".
word choice - "In graduate programs" versus "at graduate level ...
2011年3月16日 · I think Courses taken at graduate level is more appropriate since it will imply that you are referring to all the courses you have pursued while in graduate program(s). On the other hand, Courses taken in graduate program would limit the clarity and one may end up assuming that you did only one graduate program.
single word requests - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
The most cost-effective way to do this was obvious: just rename a large number of existing further-education establishments as "universities". The only costs involved were painting new signboards outside the buildings, reprinting their paperwork, and updating their websites. Cheap at half the price! –
grammaticality - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
2015年6月3日 · Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.