- Graduated at from by - WordReference Forums
1 Fulano, graduated from the university of 2 Fulano, graduated at the university of 3 Fulano, graduated by the university of O mesmo para Masters Degree at from by the university of Pelo Google, vi que há as três possibilidades, mas existe alguma que seja "a" correta e as demais erradas, ou todas servem? Grato
- a graduate of from the university of . . . | WordReference Forums
To say you "graduated from" a college means you received an undergraduate degree from that college It could be a 4-year BS or BA or a 2-year "Associate degree" In several professions, the undergraduate degree is just the "first step" You need a 4-year degree, plus one or more graduate degrees, to work as a doctor, lawyer, nurse, teacher, etc
- When I graduate lt;from gt; high school . . . | WordReference Forums
"I graduated high school, and it fell down " It sounds particularly odd when a TV journalist or, worse, a school teacher, uses the from-less version Unfortunately, that happens more and more
- graduated from high school graduated high school - WordReference Forums
I saw a text that says, "I graduated high school " Shouldn't it be graduated from high school instead?
- She graduated from high school in on June 12, 1998
Hi, Could you please tell me which one I should use for this sentence? "She graduated from high school in on June 12, 1998 " Thank you very much
- Graduated as? - WordReference Forums
Rosaline graduated as a bachelor of economics, majoring in business administration from Open University The problem here is "graduated as", I have seen it several times on the internet, but I'm not sure It's grammatically correct
- Im graduated vs. I have graduated - WordReference Forums
You can say "I have graduated from college" simply to state the fact that you have graduated, but if you want to specify the college or university or trade school or whatever, you say "I graduated from the University of Science"
- I recently graduated with my master degree - WordReference Forums
Hi everyone! I have some doubts about this sentence (in particoular the word 'with'): I recently graduated with my master degree at the University of X (name of the city) I'm writing my cover letter and I have found this sentence written somewhere on the web Could you please tell me if it
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