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graduate

英 ['grædʒʊət; -djʊət] 美[ˈɡrædʒuˌet]
  • vt. 授予…学位;分等级;标上刻度
  • vi. 毕业;渐变
  • n. 研究生;毕业生
  • adj. 毕业的;研究生的

考试真题


After graduating with a degree in business and accounting, she joined a public accounting firm, married, bought a house, put lots of stuff in it, and had a baby.

出自-2017年6月阅读原文

College graduates, for example, are particularly interested in driverless cars compared with those who have less education: 59 percent of college graduates said they would like to use a driverless car compared with 38 percent of those with a high-school diploma or lessWhere a person lives matters, toIt will not necessarily reduce road accidents.

出自-2016年6月阅读原文

In some departments, either the chairman or the director of graduate studies serves for at least the first semester as a new student adviser.

出自-2016年6月听力原文

In any case, new graduate students can learn who their advisers or temporary advisers are by visiting or emailing the departmental office and asking for the information.

出自-2016年6月听力原文

If you are a graduate teaching assistant, your adviser also may be your boss.

出自-2016年6月听力原文

If you are a graduate student, you may depend on your adviser for many things, including help with improving grades, acquiring financial support, forming an examining committee and getting letters of recommendation.

出自-2016年6月听力原文

Academic departments vary in their procedures for assigning academic advisers to graduate students.

出自-2016年6月听力原文

I first began to investigate the basis of human motivation—and how people persevere after setbacks—as a psychology graduate student at Yale University in the 1960s.

出自-2016年12月阅读原文

Rudy Guardron, 32, a 2004 graduate of Columbia's program, was a premedical student in college and then worked for a pharmaceutical (药物的) research company.

出自-2013年12月阅读原文

But as the nursing shortage worsens, a growing number of schools and hospitals are establishing "fast-track programs" that enable college graduates with no nursing experience to become registered nurses with only a year or so of specialized training.

出自-2013年12月阅读原文

The company just released an updated version last week, and it'll be utilized in over 50 undergraduate and graduate classrooms this coming school year.

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

A Hills dale teacher who became principal last year, remembers sitting with other teachers watching students file out of a graduation ceremony and asking one another in astonishment, "How did that student graduate?

出自-2012年6月阅读原文

BASIS in Tucson, with only 120 high-schoolers and 18 graduates this year.

出自-2012年6月阅读原文

Nearly 250 schools on the full ,Newsweek list of the top 5% of schools nationally had fewer than 200 graduates in

出自-2012年6月阅读原文

Ten years ago, when the first Newsweek list based on college-level test participation was published, only three of the top 100 schools had graduating Classes smaller than 100 students.

出自-2012年6月阅读原文

the size and number of their graduating classes

出自-2012年6月阅读原文

She joined the Peace Corps after she graduated from the college because she wanted to do something to help other people.

出自-2013年12月听力原文

Why did Donna join the Peace Corps after she graduated from college

出自-2013年12月听力原文

girls who graduate from single-sex schools are three times more likely to become engineers than those who attend coeducational schools.

2019年12月四级真题(第一套)听力 Section C

I first began to investigate the basis of human motivation— and how people persevere after setbacks—as a psychology graduate student at Yale University in the 1960s.

2016年12月四级真题(第二套)阅读 Section B

Young adults who went to college or graduate school were doing pretty well.

2017年6月四级真题(第一套)听力 Section B

Teachers need to be much better paid to attract the best college graduates to the nation's worst schools.

出自-2016年6月阅读原文

There's a lot for students to complain about: the repayment threshold for paying back loans will be frozen for five years, meaning that lower-paid graduates have to start repaying their loans; and maintenance grants have been replaced by loans, meaning that students from poorer backgrounds face higher debt than those with wealthier parents.

出自-2016年12月阅读原文

Graduates from elite universities usually can get decent jobs.

出自-2016年12月阅读原文

And graduating doesn't even provide any guarantee of a decent job : six in ten graduates today are in non-graduate jobs.

出自-2016年12月阅读原文

Almost half of graduates--those who go on to earn less--will have a portion of their debt written off.

出自-2016年12月阅读原文

To make matters worse, these schools are ill-equipped to graduate these students— young adults who face specific challenges and obstacles.

出自-2015年12月阅读原文

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, for instance, admits only that the graduation rate for its first-generation pupils is much lower than the percentage of all students who graduate within four years ( ' , 81 percent).

出自-2015年12月阅读原文

Elite universities tend to graduate first-generation students at a higher rate.

出自-2015年12月阅读原文

College graduates will still fare better than those with only s high school education, of course.

出自-2015年12月阅读原文

By sanctioning this watered-down version of college, universities are catering to the social and educational needs of wealthy students at the expense of others who won't enjoy the financial backing or social connections of richer students once they graduate.

出自-2015年12月阅读原文

As recent graduates can testify, the job market isn't kind to candidates who can't demonstrate genuine competence, along with a well-cultivated willingness to work hard.

出自-2015年12月阅读原文

A flagship university in the South, the school graduates just 16 percent of its first-generation students, despite its overall graduation rate of 71 percent.

出自-2015年12月阅读原文

( ' , Harvard, for example, boasts a six-year graduation rate for underrepresented minority groups of 98 percent)Christian Vazquez, a first-generation Yale graduate, is another exception, his success story setting him far apart from students such as Nijay.

出自-2015年12月阅读原文

While fully 64% of all U.S. high school graduates attend college of some point in their life, just 30% of the comparable German population, 28% of the French, 20% of the British, and 37%of the Japanese proceed beyond high school.

出自-2015年12月听力原文

By sanctioning this watered-down version of college, universities are "catering to the social and educational needs of wealthy students at the expense of others " who won't enjoy the financial backing or social connections of richer students once they gra

2015年12月六级真题(第一套)阅读 Section C

Children with attention problems in early childhood were 40% less likely to graduate from high school, says a new study from Duke University.

2018年12月六级真题(第一套)阅读 Section C

Christian Vazquez, a first-generation Yale graduate, is another exception, his success story setting him far apart from students such as Nijay.

2015年12月六级真题(第三套)阅读 Section B

Coaches do not necessarily have the incentive to graduate players.

2017年6月六级真题(第一套)听力 Section A

Compared with other groups, I think the numbers in this group, at those 65 schools, are something like just barely more than half of the black male athletes graduate at all.

2017年6月六级真题(第一套)听力 Section A

Graduate students and postdocs, who often are working on their lab head's grant, may have no choice if their supervisor or another senior colleague opposes sharing.

2017年12月六级真题(第二套)阅读 Section B

Many people graduate from school or college, not knowing what to do with their lives, and get a job without really thinking about it.

2017年12月六级真题(第一套)听力 Section C

Suppose that Jerry marries Jennet, who is a college graduate and is working.

2017年12月六级真题(第二套)听力 Section C

The first Cube Sat was created in the early 2000s, as a way of enabling Stanford graduate students to design, build, test and operate a spacecraft with similar capabilities to the USSR's Sputnik.

2019年6月六级真题(第三套)阅读 Section B

The University of North Carolina at Chapel hill, for instance, admits only that the graduation rate for its first-generation pupils is "much lower" than the percentage of all students who graduate within four years 81 percent.

2015年12月六级真题(第三套)阅读 Section B

To make matters worse, these schools are ill-equipped to graduate these students — young adults who face specific challenges and obstacles.

2015年12月六级真题(第三套)阅读 Section B

You are heading for a completely different world now that you are about to graduate from high school.

2019年6月六级真题(第一套)听力 Section A

A latest study on the college job market showed that employers wanted to hire 22% fewer graduates this year than last.

2016年高考英语全国卷1 听力 原文

A listener in China, Wang ming, who is about to get an engineering degree, wants to know how American college graduates find jobs.

2016年高考英语全国卷1 听力 原文

But one difference: fewer of this year's graduates have started to search for jobs.

2016年高考英语全国卷1 听力 原文

Engineering graduates were more likely to have started their job search already, and to have accepted a job.

2016年高考英语全国卷1 听力 原文

Eventually the girls all graduated from college and went away to work for themselves, but one by one, the daughters returned to work in the family business.

2015年高考英语安徽卷 阅读理解 阅读B 原文

I graduated on scholarship and danced professionally for ten years.

2018年高考英语全国卷2 听力 原文

I'll graduate from college the coming June.

2014年高考英语全国卷1 听力 原文

Maurice Ashley was kind and smart, a former graduate returning to teach, and this job was no game for him: he meant business.

2018年高考英语全国卷I 完形填空 原文

More than 750, 000 have graduated from SAC, with many seeking employment in engineering, aviation, education, medicine and a wide variety of other professions.

2018年高考英语北京卷 阅读理解 阅读B 原文

My daughter is a university graduate working toward her master's degree in english.

2016年高考英语天津卷 阅读理解 阅读B 原文

Soon I will graduate and become part of the real world.

2019年高考英语北京卷 语法填空 原文

You are not paying all or your tuition to merely go to class, study, pass tests and graduate.

2016年高考英语浙江卷(6月) 阅读理解 七选五 原文

These are disciplines that are going out of style: 22% of American college graduates now major in business compared with only 2% in history and 4% in English.

出自-2011年考研阅读原文

Equally unsurprisingly, only about half end up with professorships for which they entered graduate school.

出自-2011年考研阅读原文

This leaves today’s average law-school graduate with $100, 000 of debt on top of undergraduate debts.

出自-2014年考研阅读原文

The commission ignores that for several decades America’s colleges and universities have produced graduates who don’t know the content and character of liberal education and are thus deprived of its benefits.

出自-2014年考研阅读原文

But most law graduates never get a big-firm job.

出自-2014年考研阅读原文

David Graddol concludes that monoglot English graduates face a bleak economic future as qualified multilingual youngsters from other countries are proving to have a competitive advantage over their British counterparts in global companies and organizations.

出自-2017年考研翻译原文

But now most colleges save for many selective campuses, allow all undergraduates, and even graduate students, to get their low grades forgiven.

2019年考研真题(英语一)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

The scores were then used in conjunction with an applicant's score on the Graduate Management Admission Test, or GMAT, a standardised exam which is marked out of 800 points, to make a decision on whether to accept him or her.

2013年考研真题(英语一)完形填空 Section Ⅰ

There's always a constant fear of falling behind everyone else on the socially perpetuated "race to the finish line," whether that be toward graduate school, medical school or a lucrative career.

2017年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

This leaves today's average law-school graduate with $100, 000 of debt on top of undergraduate debts.

2014年考研真题(英语一)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ