No, the noun 'graduate' is a concrete noun, a word for a person.
A graduate is a person, a concrete noun.
The noun 'graduate' is a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for someone who has been awarded a degree from a school, university, or college. The noun forms for the verb to graduate are graduation and the gerund, graduating.
The noun 'alumna' is a word for a female graduate of a school, college or university.The noun 'alumnus', once a word for a male graduate, now functions as a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female graduate.
graduate (graj'-oo-it) graduation
The word graduate is a verb (graj oo ate), a noun (graj oo it), and an adjective (graj oo it). Examples:Verb: Junior will graduate in June.Noun: We're so proud of our son, the graduate.Adjective: He will begin his graduate studies in the fall.
The noun 'graduate' is a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for someone who has been awarded a degree from a school, university, or college.
graduado (noun) graduar (verb)
No, graduation is a noun. The verb form is graduate.
It depends, if it's the verb (to graduate) it's /gradwate/ if it's a noun (like a person) it's /gradwet/
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.
No, the word 'did' is a verb or an auxiliary verb; past tense of the verb 'do'. Example:Did he graduate? Yes he did.When do you graduate? When I do, I will let you know.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. Example:Jack has finished school. Did he graduate? Yes he did. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'Jack' in the second and third sentences)
to graduate = lesayem et khok halimudim (לסיים את חוק הלימודים) a graduate (noun) = bogehr (בוגר)