f. alumna
Graduate of a school, college, or university.
Sinônimos
Examples for "graduate"
Examples for "graduate"
1We aim to have greater female participation in future graduate programme intakes.
2He has pleaded 'not guilty' to murdering law graduate and model Steenkamp.
3Team officers are highly sought after by industry and graduate business schools.
4According to state funding rules, the more students that graduate the better.
5A business administration graduate, Lopez said she couldn't find work in Honduras.
1Many alumni have led extremely successful careers in both practice and industry.
2On one alumni donation card he said: Praise Allah for Sept. 11.
3Gawker alumni are editors at many prestige media outlets in New York.
4I called the alumni office, as you asked me to, Mr. Harrington.
5About 40 percent of its alumni, Ofer Winter among them, become officers.
1A Naval Academy grad, twenty-five years of good service, hardworking, honest, reliable.
2He was a post-grad who only hit on first and second years.
3It was about twenty years ago, when I was a grad student.
4The demand for tickets, even for grad students, far outstrips the supply.
5I actually did my undergrad and some grad work in children's literature.
1Corporate professionals sat beside eager entrepreneurs, and ambitious students beside proud alumnus.
2It's preceded by stand-up sets from himself and fellow Ted-alumnus Patrick McDonnell.
3And chance might have made thee an alumnus, like one of those.
4Seth Breidbart, a fellow Columbia Science Honors Program alumnus, offers bolstering testimony.
5An intelligent citizen is an accident of God, not the work of alumnus.
1One paper he wrote as a graduate student is still regularly cited.
2The graduate student explained this, and Pauling, being Pauling, politely ignored him.
3One of the editors is Bill Sales, a graduate student from Philadelphia.
4He sounded like a graduate student introducing himself at his first conference.
5For his part, Horace seemed to be a typical overanxious graduate student.
1Some form of alumnæ association has been in existence since the end of the first school year.
2One or two influential alumnæ, who had something to gain from the established order, took up the fight.
3Mills the alumnæ of Mrs. Atkins-LynchSeminary attended the commencement exercises of Mills College of May 4, 1901.
4The alumnae gavel and the historic Tree Day spade were also unharmed.
5The response of the alumnae to this stirring appeal was instant and ardent.
6The methods of the alumnae were no less varied and amusing.
7Our winnings go to the Forsyte Alumnae Scholarship Fund, she explained.
8She's on the alumnae mailing list, of course, but she never answers the questionnaires.
9The Response in behalf of the Alumnae of Yamma Gamma was a neat Affair.
10In 1914, about one fifth of the trustees were alumnae.
11The foundation offers bursaries and scholarships to Tivoli Gardens High School alumnae attending tertiary institutions.
12About forty per cent of the alumnae are married.
13In states where there were no clubs, state committees rounded up the scattered alumnae and non-graduates.
14Professor Calkins, the head of the Department, is one of the distinguished alumnae of Smith College.
15Often she has said, 'I feel that one of Wellesley's strongest points is in her alumnae.'
16After graduating from the program, alumnae may continue their involvement by becoming youth leaders and peer educators.