Similar words: graduate, postgraduate, undergraduate, graduation, gradual, gradually, gradualism, adulterated. Meaning: ['grædjʊeɪtɪd] adj. 1. (of taxes) increasing as the amount taxed increases 2. marked with or divided into degrees 3. (of taxes) decreasing as the amount taxed increases 4. taking place by degrees.
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(151) He dropped out of City after a year served in the army, returned to City, and graduated in 1959.
(152) He graduated from North Dakota State University in 1993 with a bachelor's degree in civil engineering.
(153) Over the next 15 years, 700 did-and three-fourths of those graduated,(www.Sentencedict.com) according to Gray.
(154) The earnings of women with a college education were not much higher than those of women who only graduated from high school.
(155) He also graduated from Moorhead State University in 1989 with a bachelor's degree in computer information systems.
(156) Ellsworth had graduated seventh in a high school class of 400.
(157) She has graduated from the brown velvet hot pants of her stockbroker days to Armani, Ralph and Prada.
(158) Graduated separatism, the acceptable face of separatism, can be seen as the ripples which pass outwards from this.
(159) Despite this tragedy, she graduated with the second highest grade point average in her high school.
(160) We both graduated from the same high school in Queens.
(161) They might remember also that without bipartisan accommodation the graduated income tax never would have become a constitutional amendment.
(162) He was really pleased when he graduated to the bigger ones.
(163) We hadn't seen each other since we graduated from college.
(164) Taylor attacked a proposal by Forbes to replace the current graduated income tax with a flat tax of 17 percent.
(165) Graduated separatism accepts pure separatism's definition of the problem, but not the solution.
(166) Entering the University of Dundee, he graduated with first-class honours in history in 1975, and then pursued postgraduate study.
(167) Two main types were developed, depending on whether water flowed out of or into a graduated vessel.
(168) The graduated scheme gave worse value to women than to men, on the grounds that we retire earlier and live longer.
(169) At Berkeley, he began stringing for Time magazine, which hired him after he graduated.
(170) Ricky graduated, but didn't seem to know what to do with his life. He was drifting.
(171) Tsila had graduated from high school and had studied at the university.
(172) She graduated with very good grades and went on to graduate school.
(173) In 1985, only 3 percent of medical students graduated owing more than $ 75, 000.
(174) By then, Graham had graduated from Appalachian State University with a degree in business.
(175) In setting the final rates of conversion, a distinction was made between graduated levels of personal savings and assets and liabilities.
(176) She graduated from the Gymnasium and has even studied in the university.
(177) After her spell in the Palace Girls she had graduated to playing small parts in the Blackpool shows.
(178) When he graduated from Northwood University with excellent training in business administration, I felt so proud.
(179) The law school graduated its first black student in 1880.
(180) Let me return to my own experiences to illustrate the relationship between pure and graduated separatism.
More similar words: graduate, postgraduate, undergraduate, graduation, gradual, gradually, gradualism, adulterated, situated, unadulterated, evacuated, antiquated, infatuated, superannuated, aggravated, integrated, traduce, grade, grader, adumbrate, upgrade, grading, degrade, adulterate, degraded, gradient, degrading, gradation, retrograde, stalingrad.