英:[græd]
美:[ɡræd]
英:[græd]
美:[ɡræd]
复数:grads
词根:grad
n.grader 分级机;分类机;(美)(中小学的)…年级学生
graduate(n.)的缩写,可以追溯到1871年。
Noun or adjective by shortening Noun French grade degree, from Latin gradus
The first known use of grad was circa 1871
grade1 of 2verb
to arrange in grades : sort
grade apples
to make level or evenly sloping
grade a highway
to give a grade to
grade a student's performance
to assign to a grade
to form a series having only slight differences
colors that grade into one another
grade2 of 2noun
position in a scale of rank, quality, or order leather of the highest grade
the grade of sergeant
a stage, step, or degree in a series, order, or ranking
a class of things that are of the same rank, quality, or order
a division of the school course representing a year's work
finished the fourth grade
the pupils in a school division
plural the elementary school system
teach in the grades
a mark or rating especially of accomplishment in school
a grade of 90 on a test
a standard of quality
government grades for meat
the degree of slope (as of a road or railroad track)
gradnoun or adjective
graduate
1 Stonehouse shares the gallery with Minneapolis artist Melissa Cooke, a former grad student of his at the University of Wisconsin.
2 How many Harvard grads with PhDs from Columbia, who have built careers writing for The New Yorker, are also phenomenal professional poker players?
3 After that, Major and the toddlers will relocate to Mobile to be closer to family as the new grad hunts for a job.
4 In fact, wages for college grads have remained flat for over two decades, while debts have risen.
5 In short, young college grads are moving here, and staying, because they like the city's amenities and culture, not because they're chasing jobs.
6 One evening last month, two recent college grads — one from a conservative Christian college, the other from a more ecumenical liberal arts university — got together online with a group of their peers.
7 About five years later, I was in grad school in upstate New York.
8 His life now resumed, Ahmed — an Oxford grad whose résumé includes “Rogue One,” “Jason Bourne” and “Venom,” as well as a lead actor Emmy for HBO’s “The Night Of” — spent lockdown in London this spring.
9 Not what he saw himself doing way back when he was in grad school.
10 "For me, drama is too passive," says Szifrón, whose lithe frame and enthusiastic demeanor make him look more like a recent film school grad than seasoned director.
11 A former Cornish College of the Arts student, and a Roosevelt High School grad, the soft-spoken and genial Smith considers the effort an act of homage to a musical classic he grew up with.
12 Rakoff was a refugee from grad school and from a long-term relationship she felt compelled to abandon for reasons she did not understand.
13 If you do have to leave grad school, in the worst case it won't be for too long.
如果因为创业你必须离开学校,好歹这种痛苦不会持续太长时间。
14 Harvard grad: “I come from a place where we do not end our sentences with prepositions.”
15 She started the group in 2008, not long after she arrived in New York City as a new college grad to work for an Internet start-up.
16 Many campaign couples meet as field organizers or while doing advance work, as both jobs are typically held by recent college grads working in small offices in remote towns they’ve never been before.
17 One recent grad’s unbearable New York roommate, for instance, claimed he suffered from a muscular disease that would leave him dead within a year.
18 Since then, scores of white people have been caught on camera calling the cops on black people for existing: an eight-year-old selling water; a grad student sleeping her dorm common room; black women playing golf.
19 This does, intriguingly, transform her legendary voluptuousness into a believable portrait of an Ole Miss grad whose hard-won financial safety has started to crumble.
20 Most of my friends were in grad school or had found great jobs already, working at prestigious firms like Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.
1 毕业生
2 校友
3 研究生的
4 研究生