Dictionary
matriculate
verb
To enroll as a member of a body, especially of a college or university
Exact(8)
Mike Vincent, a student at UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business, gives his advice to MBAs preparing to matriculate this autumn ONE year ago, I was preparing to move back to America to begin business school.
The cost of the full-time MBA, whose students matriculate this September, is £12,650 ($20,000).
I bet those graduates are all trying to break into puppetry!I am sure that many young graduates feel entitled to better work than they've managed to find, and some of them probably chose poorly when it came time to matriculate.
The most obvious way to measure the effectiveness of an admissions policy in generating a diverse student body is to count members of racial minorities who matriculate.
By June 1661, he was ready to matriculate at Trinity College, Cambridge, somewhat older than the other undergraduates because of his interrupted education.
Germany permitted women to matriculate in 1901, and by 1910 women had been admitted to universities in the Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, Sweden, Switzerland, Norway, Austria-Hungary, France, and Turkey.
Thomas was preparing to matriculate in medicine at London University when his father died.
Then a legal team led by the N.A.A.C.P.'s Constance Baker Motley, and including such young lawyers as Vernon Jordan, championed their case, and, two years later, a U.S. District Court judge ruled that Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes were indeed qualified for admission to the University of Georgia and must be allowed to matriculate without delay.
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