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Discover LudwigThe phrase "amount of scholarships" is not correct in standard written English.
The term "amount" is typically used for uncountable nouns, while "scholarships" is a countable noun.
Example: "The total number of scholarships available this year has increased significantly."
Alternatives: "number of scholarships" or "quantity of scholarships".
Exact(4)
Those included organizing a marching band, getting the football team to offer the maximum amount of scholarships and spearheading a fund-raising effort that aggressively tapped into an alumni base of approximately 150,000, many of whom live on Long Island.
They are able to offer a small amount of scholarships but not nearly enough to really address this challenge of reaching the most "at-risk" students.
Dodd wanted the SEC to limit the amount of scholarships to about 32 per year, which would keep the other schools from offering 45 scholarships, picking the best, and withdrawing scholarships from the rest.
"We're gonna give it to another kid, because there only are a certain amount of scholarships, even though they're corporate paid, they are limited, so they should've stepped back, paid their own way and let another kid have the scholarship".
Similar(52)
No amount of scholarship is likely to confirm this theory, but details of the argument are gripping and instructive nonetheless.
Correction: April 14 , 2002 Sunday An article on March 31 about the availability of college scholarships misstated the amount of scholarship money given by the Dollars for Scholars program.
An article on March 31 about the availability of college scholarships misstated the amount of scholarship money given by the Dollars for Scholars program.
26), believes Yale is a "great institution in decline... that is no longer aware of why it exists or for what purpose," he ignores the enormous amount of scholarship and research the university produces at all levels.
In a New Yorker article a few years ago, a brilliant literary critic came to the conclusion that Michael Tippett was a more valuable British composer than Benjamin Britten; no amount of scholarship and wisdom in the world of books seems to have rescued the critic from this appalling miscalculation.
The amount of scholarship chronicling these events is immense, and although Brookhiser is somewhat sparing in acknowledging his debts to historians who have preceded him, his sprightly narrative will serve as an entertaining introduction for those who are making their first acquaintance with Madison.
It is true, of course, that it's no longer necessary to ask permission from James Joyce's representative on earth in order to quote from the work he published in his lifetime, but a significant amount of scholarship draws heavily from the manuscripts and letters, so it is inaccurate to view the recent copyright expiry as marking the beginning of a new era in Joyce Studies.
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