They can be any age.
An alumnus (plural alumni) is a graduate, or more specifically a male graduate, of a college, university, or school.
meow
I am assuming you mean alumnus. An alumnus is a member of a college or university). For example: I am an alumnus of Penn State University. Usually used in context to a male. A female is alumna. When referring to a group of male and female, alumnus is used.
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.
A pupil; especially, a graduate of a college or other seminary of learning.
I believe the word you're looking for is alumnus (singular) or alumni (plural). And, according to 'Collins gem English dictionary', the meaning of alumnus is "US graduate of a college".
She has one son named Alan who is a Dartmouth College Alumnus.
The feminine of alumnus is alumna (plural alumnae). The opposite of an alumnus is a dropout.
Harvard College, 1636 - founded on an endowment from John Harvard, an alumnus of Emmanuel College, Cambridge University, England.
Awards: Outstanding Alumnus Award, Loyola College of Baltimore, 2002.
alumnus is a sentence
267 years old