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The phrase "a cadet at" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to someone who is undergoing training in a military or similar academy or institution.
Example: "After years of hard work, she finally became a cadet at the prestigious military academy."
Alternatives: "a trainee at" or "a student at".
Exact(53)
Seitchi Mahamat, Chad A cadet at the French military academy Saint-Cyr Coëtquidan, he was travelling home to Chad after the death of his mother.
Huntsman was a sergeant when Bowdich was a cadet at the police academy.
He met his wife Holly when he was a cadet at West Point.
He was a cadet at West Point and I was a junior looking forward to winter formals that night.
In his late teens, he enrolls as a cadet at the Zaraisk flying school and begins a grueling training program.
Ernest Lee, a cadet at West Point who comes from Sacramento and hopes to serve in South Korea's demilitarized zone, has musical tastes that are….
Similar(7)
In perhaps the most notorious recent case, a male cadet at an elite military academy was found last year to have streamed video of himself having sex with a female colleague to friends using Skype, without the woman's knowledge.
Santorum, who has a son who is a freshman cadet at the Citadel, did not return a request for comment.
Nearby are a cadet college (at Faujdar Hat) and a merchant-marine academy.
I am interested in attending a cadet parade at West Point.
A journalist's account of four years in the life of a cadet class at West Point.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com