graduate
Etymology
From Latin graduātus (“graduated”), from gradus (“step”).
noun
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A person who is recognized by a university as having completed the requirements of a degree studied at the institution. If the government wants graduates to stay in the country they should offer more incentives. -
(US, Canada) A person who is recognized by a high school as having completed the requirements of a course of study at the school. -
(Philippines) A person who is recognized as having completed any level of education. -
A graduated (marked) cup or other container, thus fit for measuring.
adj
verb
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(intransitive, ergative) To be recognized by a school or university as having completed the requirements of a degree studied at the institution. After graduating from Princeton University, he earned a law degree in Canada, then worked as an environmental lawyer in Israel before settling on the south side of Youngstown. 2019-2-19, Jeremy Pelzer, “Youngstown School Board member Dario Hunter seeks Green Party presidential nomination”, in cleveland.comThe man graduated in 1967.Trisha graduated from college. -
(transitive, proscribed) To be certified as having earned a degree from; to graduate from (an institution). Trisha graduated college. -
(transitive) To certify (a student) as having earned a degree Indiana University graduated the student.The college graduated him as soon as he was no longer eligible to play under NCAA rules. -
(transitive) To mark (something) with degrees; to divide into regular steps or intervals, as the scale of a thermometer, a scheme of punishment or rewards, etc. -
(intransitive) To change gradually. As the species graduate into each other, both in form and in habits, from the grass-eating Geese to the fish-eating Harelds, it is difficult, […] to divide this large group into sections. 1852, William Macgillivray, A history of British birds, indigenous and migratory, page 573sandstone which graduates into gneiss; carnelian sometimes graduates into quartz -
To prepare gradually; to arrange, temper, or modify by degrees or to a certain degree; to determine the degrees of. to graduate the heat of an oven -
(chemistry) To bring to a certain degree of consistency, by evaporation, as a fluid. -
(intransitive) To taper, as the tail of certain birds. -
(transitive, software engineering) To approve (a feature) for general release. We have graduated the new machine-learning features and will roll them out tomorrow. -
(Japanese entertainment) Of an idol: to exit a group; or of a virtual YouTuber, to leave a management agency; usually accompanied with "graduation ceremony" send-offs, increased focus on the leaving member, and the like.
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