What do you call a fresh college graduate?
An alumnus or alumna is a former student and most often a graduate of an educational institution (school, college, university). The term is sometimes informally shortened to “alum” (optional plural “alums”).
What does graduating college feel like?
While most people think of graduation as an exciting and wonderful marking event, many fail to recognize the other emotions evoked by this transition time. Graduation not only can bring up feelings of excitement, pride, and anticipation, but also those of loss, discouragement, and fear.
How long can you call yourself a fresh graduate?
“Fresh” graduate or “recent” graduate, it’s one year, two at most. After that you’re simply a graduate… unless you’ve enrolled in graduate school for a Master’s or Doctoral degree, in which case you’re a graduate student.
Is it’graduated’or’graduated from’in a sentence?
Dropping “From”. There is still another way in which graduate is used, and this one does still produce ire in some people, in which the word is used in a transitive sense and with the meaning “to be graduated from” (“I graduated college this year”). This use is not uncommon, but it is frowned upon by some guides.
Do you call someone a graduate or a graduate?
Graduated. Students do not graduate; they are graduated. Hence most writers nowadays say, “I was, he was, or they were graduated”; and ask, “When were you, or was he, graduated?” —Alfred Ayres, The Verbalist, 1894
What’s the difference between graduated high school and graduated college?
That passive wording, “was graduated from,” was considered standard English. The current standard usage is to say someone graduated FROM high school. But by 1963, H. L. Mencken declared in his book The American Language* that the active form had triumphed over the passive form because of the American drive to simplify the language.
Is it wrong to say I graduated from college?
It is now widely agreed that there is nothing wrong with saying “I graduated from college,” and some guides even view the usage proscribed by Gould and Ayres (“I was graduated from college”) as outdated. You do not have to worry about saying that you ” graduated from” college, or any other educational institution.