matriculate

ਮੈਟ੍ਰਿਕ
definition
verb
he matriculated at the University of Vermont
be enrolled at a college or university.
record (arms) in an official register.
noun
Just 15 and not yet a matriculate , she is teaching pre-school children how to read and write.
a person who has matriculated.
example
With arms full of daughters, he feels like a rich man-at least until they 'matriculate' at the University.
Under the plan, all undergraduates entering Tulane University will 'matriculate' through a single undergraduate college.
I am equally committed to faculty and staff, and if there are ways that I can help them 'matriculate' to the university, I am going to do exactly that.
Every child who has participated in the program has gone on to 'matriculate' at a four-year college or university.
In 1869 Sofia travelled to Heidelberg to study mathematics and the natural sciences, only to discover that women could not 'matriculate' at the university.
Ph.D. programs in literature are not designed to produce poets and novelists, but Yale seems to 'matriculate' a considerable share.
He applied to graduate school, and because segregation laws prevented him from attending a school in Georgia, the state paid for him to 'matriculate' at Columbia University's Teachers College in New York.
Just 15 and not yet a 'matriculate' , she is teaching pre-school children how to read and write.
We do know that in 1719 Bayes 'matriculated' at the University of Edinburgh where he studied logic and theology.
In my final year only one person 'matriculated' to university, for example, and that was a university in the country!
After 'matriculating' , he enrolled in Arts at Sydney University in 1948.
In the examinations he won a scholarship to St John's College, Cambridge, 'matriculating' in October 1884.
In 1834 Thomson, who was aged just 10, and his brother James, 12, both 'matriculated' at the university.
Perhaps he should have attended a school that 'matriculated' students whose course of study included history, basic comprehension, and English language.
After graduating from University College, he 'matriculated' at Trinity College Cambridge in 1871.
The undergraduate I have my eye on is, at 76, probably the oldest fresher this ancient university has ever 'matriculated' .
A group of special students have just sat for the 'matriculation' test this year.
The thrill of studying advanced mathematics at Chicago made her determined to carry her studies further and when her travelling fellowship ended she 'matriculated' at the University of Chicago, registering for a Master's Degree.
He dropped out of high school and started working odd jobs during the day and taking courses at night, studying for the 'matriculation' exams.
Whether these plans will increase the number of minorities 'matriculating' to these universities remains to be seen.
They rarely acknowledge that the option of attending a full-time residential college is not available to the vast majority of people 'matriculating' in community colleges.
As adults, Martin was university trained and Malcolm 'matriculated' in prison.
In 1895, he 'matriculated' at Glasgow University, where he graduated with an M.A. in 1900.
The 'matriculation' meant that you could depend on yourself and make every effort to alter your status and life.
The man in his early 50s, who had bicycled some distance in order to be able to take part in the 'matriculation' , must have been a little embarrassed by the many cameras trained on him.
Instead he 'matriculated' in the University of Ferrara, from which he obtained a doctorate in canon law.
After all the detail on the island about how this man struggled to survive and become who he becomes, the 'matriculation' back into society is skipped over.
On 29 August 1530 Mercator 'matriculated' at the University of Louvain, taking the course in the humanities and philosophy.
That fall, I went to college, at a college that had only 'matriculated' its second co-ed class.
In fact all that is known is that on Friday 20 December 1577 he 'matriculated' at the University of Oxford with an entry in the official records giving his age as seventeen, his father as a plebeian, and his birthplace Oxfordshire.
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