In the book, "The Diary of a Young Girl" Anne Frank writes that students in Nazi Germany had to sign a document that said they were in agreement with the Nazi actions and laws if they wished to continue their schooling. In the book, the name of the document was never mentioned.
Yes. Last year 90% students got a BE program as their DUAL degrees. Rest got direct transfers to BE programs and some did not opt for either.
Either is not an adjective. It has no degrees.
Undergraduate students are those who are pursuing either an associates or bachelor's degree. Graduate students are those in the process of pursing either a masters or doctorate degree.
Either "Do any of the students" or "Do any of the students" is appropriate to use, as they convey the same meaning.
360 degrees is either a square or a quadrilateral.
It's not clear - I think you mean, "Either the students or the teachers can join." Or perhaps you mean, "Both students and teachers can join."
To find the number of students who did not earn either A's in math or make the honor roll, we can use the principle of inclusion-exclusion. There are 21 students on the honor roll, 13 with A's in math, and 5 who earned both. So, the total number of students who earned either A's in math or made the honor roll is 21 + 13 - 5 = 29. Therefore, the number of students who did not earn either A's in math or make the honor roll is 32 (total students) - 29 (students who earned either) = 3 students.
Either degrees Celsius or degrees Fahrenheit
Well, honey, that sentence is as confused as a chameleon in a bag of Skittles. It should be "Either the teacher or the students are to blame for the fire" to match subject-verb agreement. So, in short, no, it ain't grammatically correct.
Undergraduate students are those who are pursing either an associates or bachelor's degree. Graduate students are those who are pursuing either a master's or doctorate degree.
Either anatomy or zoology.