Graduate in a sentence as a noun

He said "Can we give our students more choice as to what is required to graduate?

Depending on your state, between 59 and 80% of people graduate high school.

Speaking as a graduate of one, top schools teach you credentialing and ladder climbing.

We have more people who graduate with degrees in dance than we do people who graduate with degrees in mathematics.

I often worry about whether my startup clock is running out. I'm closer to 30 than 20, finishing up graduate school, and for the most part feel young.

Graduate in a sentence as a verb

Many blacks that get into Harvard and graduate are treated as sub-students by employers like major banks.

Start off with a simple hello world, graduate to a chat app or something simple, and get them to a full blown large application.

About 7 years ago one of my graduate students \nwas browsing 20 publications from ACS to create a vocabulary.

In response, then-graduate student Sweeney started hunting for the Governors hospital records in the GIC data.

Margaret Thatcher's undergraduate degree was in chemistry and so she understood the mechanisms.

Graduate in a sentence as an adjective

One of the easiest things to do in poetry is to lose the reader--a great poet can put an incredibly complicated multilayered concept onto a small amount of paper--and require a graduate-level understanding from the reader to understand it.

If you'd happily accept a sub-market wage to be taught laboratory research techniques, in a piecemeal and haphazard fashion, by sleep-deprived world experts equipped with state-of-the-artish equipment, engineering graduate school is the game for you.

In graduate school, my thesis focused on the Southeast US from Reconstruction through the Civil Rights Act of 1964, investigating the role religion played in the development, acceptance, and perpetuation of the Souths attitudes and behaviors toward race, class, and gender.

Graduate definitions

noun

a person who has received a degree from a school (high school or college or university)

See also: alumnus alumna alum grad

noun

a measuring instrument for measuring fluid volume; a glass container (cup or cylinder or flask) whose sides are marked with or divided into amounts

verb

receive an academic degree upon completion of one's studies; "She graduated in 1990"

verb

confer an academic degree upon; "This school graduates 2,000 students each year"

verb

make fine adjustments or divide into marked intervals for optimal measuring; "calibrate an instrument"; "graduate a cylinder"

See also: calibrate fine-tune

adjective

of or relating to studies beyond a bachelor's degree; "graduate courses"

See also: postgraduate