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- gold or golden bachelor - WordReference Forums
I understand the meaning of "bachelor", but lately I have heard people say "gold bachelor" or "golden bachelor" Are these terms in use or even correct?
- hold (both) a Bachelors and (a?) Masters degree - WordReference Forums
Or: I hold both a Bachelor's and a Master's degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Z ? As I said earlier, the first one doesn't attach "in Mechanical Engineering" to "a Bachelor's degree " If "in Mechanical Engineering" did apply to both, then "in 2015" must also apply to both as well because the grammar is the same
- He has been conferred a Bachelors Degree certificate
Hi, I know we can say confer a degree certificate on someone, but if I change the sentence to passive voice, should I say "He has been conferred a Bachelor's Degree certificate" or "He has been conferred with a Bachelor's Degree certificate"? I found both on Google Thanks
- licenciatura - WordReference Forums
Licenciatura can be translated to either Licentiate or Bachelor´s degree, depending on the source country In Costa Rica (as in several other countries in Latin America) we have a University Bachelor´s degree BACHILLERATO UNIVERSITARIO, after which you can obtain a LICENCIATURA (licentiate)
- a golden thumb - WordReference Forums
He was a teller of dirty stories and a buffoon, and it was mostly of sin and obscenity He knew well how to steal corn and take his toll of meal three times over; and yet he had a golden thumb, by God! He wore a white coat and a blue hood He could blow and play the bagpipe well, and with its
- They are my father, my mother, my sister and I me.
Hello, Here is a sentence from my English learning book: "There are four people in my family They are my father, my mother, my sister and I " Shouldn't
- EN: there was were a lot of - WordReference Forums
I agree, it has to be "were" because "people" is plural "A lot" can go either way, though; you can use "was" if the noun is collective, or otherwise singular "There was a lot of emotion in his performance "
- In on at to the left of the picture | WordReference Forums
I agree that most of use would automatically say “on the left” “To the left” would be more likely if you wanted to say that one thing or person in a picture was positioned to the left-hand side of something else But if an art historian were explaining the details of a painting, he or she would quite probably use “at”
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