Latin phrases used to denote levels of academic distinction.
Sinónimos
Examples for "latin honors"
Examples for "latin honors"
1At Cornell University he graduated summa cum laude with distinction in all subjects.
2Eventually Austen went back and graduated-notsumma cum laude, honesty compels me to add.
3But she was from an excellent family, and had graduated from Yale summa cum laude.
4He went to Yale, and graduated summa cum laude.
5At Harvard, Levitt wrote his senior thesis on thoroughbred breeding and graduated summa cum laude.
1Jordan graduated magna cum laude with a double major in political science and history.
2He'd probably graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School.
3Romeo graduated magna cum laude from Notre Dame last year with degrees in Chinese and political science.
4Mom graduated magna cum laude from Drew.
5You graduated Barnard magna cum laude.
1Attending Southeastern Louisiana University on a basketball scholarship, she graduated cum laude.
2She left North Carolina to enroll at Harvard, where she graduated cum laude.
3At Cornell University he graduated summa cum laude with distinction in all subjects.
4The 19-year-old recently graduated cum laude, earning her bachelor's degree in computer science.
5Jordan graduated magna cum laude with a double major in political science and history.
Translations for egregia cum laude