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'graduate' is a correct and commonly used word in written English
It can be used as both a noun and a verb. As a noun, 'graduate' refers to a person who has successfully completed a course of study at a university, college, or school. For example, "She is a recent graduate of Harvard University." As a verb, 'graduate' means to successfully complete a course of study and receive a degree or diploma. For example, "He plans to graduate with honors next year." Here is an example of using 'graduate' in a sentence: "After four years of hard work, she finally graduated from medical school and became a doctor."
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He was a former advertising agency "suit", an Oxford history graduate recruited in the 50s when London establishment ad agencies recruited those kinds of people.
So when Brenda and Anisha, her friend and fellow commerce graduate, dressed in university robes, emerged from behind the tent accompanied by Loyce and her sister, Betty, they were received with prolonged ululations and delighted faces.
Tom Corfield, a Bristol engineering graduate, recalls: "My lectures were often a bit dry and I have lots of broader interests, so I started going to my friends' lectures in different subject areas.
As a recent University College London study showed, the average profile of a recent migrant is more likely to be a young graduate from western or eastern Europe working in the financial, tech or creative services than our more traditional image of an unskilled migrant labourer.
Natasha Slee, a fashion journalism graduate from the University of the Arts London who lived in a privately rented flat for two years of her degree, says: "We had silverfish in the carpets around the bathroom.
The 31-year-old Cambridge graduate, who was due to marry last month, was stabbed through the heart.
In recent years councils have shared a graduate in order to widen access to smaller districts which may be unable to afford one on their own.
Cable believes the coalition, after some false starts, has landed on a defensible policy that amounts to a graduate contribution based on the ability to pay.
I had literally just graduated and went straight into a graduate role in a local renewables company.
As thousands of bloggers and columnists who have written about her style point out, she is an Oxford graduate, fluent in English, French and Arabic, and a human rights barrister.
She also highlighted the gap in skills and training between those with a care certificate and a graduate nurse.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com