graduate

[英] [ˈɡrædjuit] [美] [ˈɡrædʒuˌet] 生词本

vi.

vt.

n.

adj.

  • 柯林斯高阶英汉双解学习词典

  • 英英释义

  • 行业释义

  • 词典例句

The noun is pronounced /'grædʒuət/. The verb is pronounced /'grædʒueɪt/. 名词读作/'grædʒuət/,动词读作 /'grædʒueɪt/。
1. N-COUNT (英国的)大学毕业生,学士学位获得者 In Britain, a graduate is a person who has successfully completed a degree at a university or college and has received a certificate that shows this. 
  • In 1973, the first Open University graduates received their degrees.

    1973年,第一批开放大学的毕业生获得了学位。

  • ...graduates in engineering.

    工程学学士

2. N-COUNT (美国的)高中(或学院、大学)毕业生 In the United States, a graduate is a student who has successfully completed a course at a high school, college, or university. 
  • The top one-third of all high school graduates are entitled to an education at the California State University.

    高中毕业生当中排名前1/3的学生可以进入加利福尼亚州立大学深造。

3. VERB (英国)大学毕业 In Britain, when a student graduates from university, they have successfully completed a degree course. 
  • She graduated in English and Drama from Manchester University.

    她毕业于曼彻斯特大学的英语和戏剧专业。

4. V-ERG (美国)中学(或大学)毕业,授予…学位(或毕业文凭) In the United States, when a student graduates, they complete their studies successfully and leave their school or university. You can also say that a school or university graduates a student or students. 
  • When the boys graduated from high school, Ann moved to a small town in Vermont...

    当儿子们高中毕业后,安搬到佛蒙特州的一个小镇上居住。

  • In 1986, American universities graduated a record number of students with degrees in computer science.

    1986年,美国大学计算机专业的毕业生人数创下了历史纪录。

5. VERB 晋升;升职;升级 If you graduate from one thing to another, you go from a less important job or position to a more important one. 
  • Bruce graduated to chef at the Bear Hotel...

    布鲁斯晋升为大熊饭店的厨师长。

  • From commercials she quickly graduated to television shows.

    她很快就从拍商业广告上升到拍电视节目。

Noun

1. a person who has received a degree from a school (high school or college or university)

2. a measuring instrument for measuring fluid volume; a glass container (cup or cylinder or flask) whose sides are marked with or divided into amounts

Verb

1. receive an academic degree upon completion of one's studies;

  • "She graduated in 1990"

2. confer an academic degree upon;

  • "This school graduates 2,000 students each year"

3. make fine adjustments or divide into marked intervals for optimal measuring;

  • "calibrate an instrument"
  • "graduate a cylinder"
Adjective

1. of or relating to studies beyond a bachelor's degree;

  • "graduate courses"

医学

  • 1.①大学毕业生;②刻度量器
1. To graduate Cum laude is to graduate with honor.
优等毕业即光荣的毕业。

来自《现代英汉综合大词典》

2. He joined the company as a graduate trainee.
他毕业后到了这个公司当实习生。

来自《简明英汉词典》

3. He needs three more credits to graduate.
他需要再修3个学分才能毕业。

来自《现代汉英综合大词典》

4. He was a college graduate.
他是个大学毕业生。

来自《简明英汉词典》

5. Mary, a junior, will graduate next year.
玛丽,一名三年级的中学生,明年将毕业。

来自《简明英汉词典》

6. Overcame childhood dyslexia to graduate second in his high-school class.
克服幼儿时期所患的诵读困难症后以第二名的优异成绩毕业于一所中学。

来自《简明英汉词典》

7. Professor Zhu will give lectures to the postgraduates [graduate students] this term.
朱教授这学期给研究生开课。

来自《现代汉英综合大词典》

8. She is a graduate nurse.
她是护士学院的毕业生。

来自《简明英汉词典》

9. The university must graduate more science students.
该大学要有更多的理科学生毕业。

来自《现代英汉综合大词典》

10. We've heard that you would graduate soon.
我们听说你很快就要毕业了。

来自《简明英汉词典》

11. Year by year a few of these slang terms prove so useful that they graduate into respectable society.
年复一年, 这些俚语中的一些证明是十分有用的,因而逐渐进入了上流社会。

来自《现代汉英综合大词典》