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The phrase "a friend from uni" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in informal contexts to refer to a friend you met during your time at university.
Example: "I met up with a friend from uni last weekend, and we reminisced about our college days."
Alternatives: "a friend from university" or "a college friend".
Exact(1)
I remember a friend from uni said to me once, "Yeah, but you're still going out having fun, I've seen on Facebook".
Similar(59)
A friend from college has an exhibition.
Never anything but a lovely friend, from @BristolUni 1970 to last interview in October in 2013.
Perhaps you live with flatmates, old friends from uni or a ragtag bunch of pals you found on Spareroom: this, too, is normal.
I think Paolo Nutini was playing, but I mostly remember the atmosphere, being with my friends from uni and having a great time.
"One of my friends from uni used to say they were a miner because his family owned a mine". Was only a matter of time really, wasn't it.
London Grammar are three friends from uni in their early 20s.
The problem with the novel is that the friends from uni are not clearly differentiated, and their dialogue on this awful weekend doesn't ring true; it's relentlessly declamatory, aggressive and critical.
I have some great friends from uni and I live with some friends from home in Mauritania.
Last year I went to the service in the city with two of my friends from uni.
So, when a friend at uni told me about Craigslist prostitution, I figured it'd be easy enough.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com