No, because they're not alumnae until after they graduate. Also, I hope you're specifically talking about women. The male form (which is pretty universally used for both sexes nowadays), is alumni.
The word alumnae is a plural noun, and the singular is alumna. An alumna is a female graduate of a college, school, or university, the female equivalent of alumnus (plural alumni).
The word alumnae is a plural noun, and the singular is alumna. An alumna is a female graduate of a college, school, or university, the female equivalent of alumnus (plural alumni).
Alumna is a Latin word. (It is the feminine form of alumnus, plural alumni).And the feminine Latin plural of alumna is alumnae.
Graduates, or former students, although the latter tends to imply they didn't graduate.
If a sister and brother graduate from the same school, she is an "alumna" (plural "alumnae") and he is an "alumnus" (plural "alumni").
No, the word alumnae is the plural form of the noun alumna, a female graduate of a school, college, or university. The plural form of the noun alumnus is alumni, male graduates of a school, college, or university.
of Alumna
The correct answer can be either A. ALUMNI or B. ALUMNAE.The noun 'alumna' is the singular noun for a female graduate or former student.The noun 'alumnae' is the plural noun for female graduates or former students.The noun 'alumnus' is the singular noun for any graduate or former student.The noun 'alumni' is is the plural noun for any graduates or former students.
Alumna is the feminine form. pupil is the English word. In spanish a female pupil is called alumna and male is called alumno. Usually in Spanish words ending in a are femenine and ending in o masculine.
"Alumnus" is singular and refers to a male graduate. The plural form for male graduates is "alumni," while the singular for a female graduate is "alumna," and the plural is "alumnae."
Alumnae Theatre was created in 1919.
Alumnae is pronounced as "uh-lum-nee."