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The phrase "marked attendance" is correct and can be used in written English
It means that someone has recorded or noted down the attendance of a group of people. Example: The teacher marked attendance for all the students present in the class. On the first day of work, the manager asked the employees to sign in to mark their attendance.
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CHANMAGUA, Guatemala — To mark attendance in Diana Melisa Contreras's kindergarten classroom, students place tongue depressors into little white cups painted with their names.
Engineers have to mark attendance and log hours; and they have to maintain good numbers in order to be considered for promotions.
Tutor time usually occurs first thing in the morning and after lunch at British schools when students attend a short class; their form tutor marks attendance and gives out school notices and reminders.
When a researcher has finished running a study they will log onto SONA and mark attendance.
As Andy Moles, the coach who has been in charge of Kenya, Scotland and New Zealand, said, they aren't here to mark attendance.
While Stuyvesant and Bronx Science require admissions exams, Midwood students are admitted based on their junior high school marks, attendance and standardized test scores.
On Broadway, the months between January and the beginning of March are usually a lull time for theatre attendance, marked by the closing of many long-running shows.
But earlier this year, they had a chance encounter, began to get on – and marked their joint attendance at the Brit awards by posing for the cameras, locked in a stagey embrace.
But earlier this year, they had a chance encounter, began to get on – and marked their joint attendance at the Brit awards by posing for the cameras, locked in a stagey embrace.
The years following the conclusion of World War II were marked by rising attendance, the growth of the minor leagues, and in 1947 the racial integration of the game (for more on the integration of baseball, see Blacks in baseball, below).
Hodges presented Bush's vision of an education grounded in the basic sciences but with technical "know how". In closing remarks, Hodges told freshmen: "This is not the place for vocational training". For students that were looking for such training, Hodges said, "The exits are clearly marked". Freshmen in attendance had positive reactions to the program.
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