These trees will thrive, to a greater or lesser degree, in a number of climates. |
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In the end, the debate created a degree of rancor among the committee members. |
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There is no higher accolade at this school than an honorary degree. |
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There is some degree of parallelism between the lives of the two women. |
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Considering the degree of muscular tension that accessory breathing entails, the net payoff in oxygenation makes it a poor energetic investment. |
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Such a degree of heat, which doth neither melt nor scorch, doth mellow, and not adure. |
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Denmark has the fourth highest ratio of tertiary degree holders in the world. |
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After many years of intense study, he received his medical degree. |
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A BBA degree can be portrayed as the gateway to the global business sector. |
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After successful completion of these programs, a bachelor's degree is awarded by the respective university. |
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The number of years of study required is determined based on the degree with the greatest number of years. |
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Students who complete a double degree program will have two separate bachelor's degrees at the end of their studies. |
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This requirement takes about six months to one year depending on the type of degree. |
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In Brazil, a bachelor's degree takes from three years to six years to complete depending on the course load and the program. |
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A bachelor's degree is the title sought by Brazilians in order to be a professional in a certain area of human knowledge. |
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Doctoral candidates are normally required to have a Master's degree in a related field. |
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The bachelor's degree is awarded after three or four years of study at a university and follows a scheme quite similar to the British one. |
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The bachelor's degree has also been used since the late 1990s in a number of areas like nursing and teaching. |
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The Magister degree, a graduate degree, was awarded after five years of study. |
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In 1899, a second graduate degree, the Diplom, was introduced when the Technische Hochschulen received university status. |
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In Poland, the licentiate degree corresponds to the bachelor's degree in Anglophone countries. |
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It is an undergraduate first study cycle program which is required to advance into further studies such as master's degree programs. |
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Currently three to four years of study are required to be awarded a bachelor's degree. |
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A master's degree will require another two to three years of coursework and a thesis. |
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The normal academic standard for bachelor's degrees in England, Wales and Northern Ireland is the honours degree. |
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However, this third degree is an anachronism from the 19th century and is not registerable with the Irish Medical Council. |
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In the UK, these qualifications, while retaining the title of bachelor's degrees, are master's degree level qualifications. |
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Th Canadian MD degree is, despite its name, classified as a bachelor's degree. |
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In the graduate program, courses leading to a degree such as the Master of Physiotherapy degree are offered. |
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Sometimes, though, the degree is offered only to nurses who are already registered. |
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In the UK, this is a master's degree level qualification that retains the title of bachelor's for historical reasons. |
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In the United States, Canada, and France, however, all colleges of pharmacy have now phased out the degree in favor of the Pharm. |
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Generally, this degree is sponsored by two or more departments within the university. |
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A degree of Doutor usually enables an individual to apply for a junior faculty position equivalent to a US Assistant Professor. |
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They can then apply to earn a master's degree or a speciality diploma, then an MD degree in a specialty. |
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The Finnish requirement for the entrance into doctoral studies is a master's degree or equivalent. |
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It is possible to graduate three years after the master's degree, while much longer periods are not uncommon. |
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It is a national degree and its requirements are fixed by the minister of higher education and research. |
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It is considered as an additional academic qualification rather than an academic degree formally. |
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This degree requires more advanced thesis work, usually involving academic research or an internship. |
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The old candidate's degree was relabeled as the bachelor's degree and the doctorandus' by the master's degree. |
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Those who obtained a degree in a foreign country can only use the Dutch title drs. |
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The doctorate has long existed in the UK as, originally, the second degree in divinity, law, medicine and music. |
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Oxford became the first university to institute the new degree, although naming it the DPhil. |
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Access to PhDs normally requires a upper second class or first class bachelor's degree, or a master's degree. |
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A doctoral degree can be revoked or rescinded by the university that awarded it. |
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Institutions with only foundation degree awarding powers are not eligible for university title. |
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Before 1918 the franchise was restricted to male graduates with a doctorate or MA degree. |
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The only exceptions are applicants for organ scholarships and those applying to read for a second undergraduate degree. |
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In 2012, a new Department of Chemistry was established and a new undergraduate degree, Chemistry with Biomedicine, was launched. |
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Admission to the diploma requires as UK degree or equivalent plus relevant experience. |
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Another possible explanation for the wall is the degree of control it would have provided over immigration, smuggling and customs. |
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They therefore give people an unusual degree of access to ideas of elves in older traditional culture. |
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Though individual figures are less naturalistic, they are grouped in coherent grouped compositions to a much greater degree. |
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The degree of observance required of members remained a major source of conflict within the order, resulting in numerous secessions. |
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Whatever Shakespeare's degree of sympathy with such inversions, the play ends with a thorough return to normative gender values. |
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On returning to England, he was awarded an honorary Master of Arts degree from Oxford University. |
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I only contend that it has very seldom had place in any degree and never almost in its full extent. |
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At the age of 13, Marvell attended Trinity College, Cambridge and eventually received a BA degree. |
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After thirteen months, a shortage of funds forced Johnson to leave Oxford without a degree, and he returned to Lichfield. |
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Just before the publication of his Dictionary in 1755, Oxford University awarded Johnson the degree of Master of Arts. |
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In August, Johnson's lack of an MA degree from Oxford or Cambridge led to his being denied a position as master of the Appleby Grammar School. |
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In an effort to end such rejections, Pope asked Lord Gower to use his influence to have a degree awarded to Johnson. |
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First, government required a degree of intelligence and breadth of knowledge of the sort that occurred rarely among the common people. |
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He had just finished a university degree and was moving to London for training as a barrister. |
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By the time of Daniel Deronda, Eliot's sales were falling off, and she faded from public view to some degree. |
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He also showed in his writing some degree of fascination with ghosts and spirits. |
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It was not until 1890 that Wells earned a Bachelor of Science degree in zoology from the University of London External Programme. |
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He was mathematically gifted and won a double first degree, which could have been the prelude to a brilliant academic career. |
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In 2000 he obtained an MChem degree from Cardiff University, and in early 2004 was awarded a PhD degree by Queen Mary University London. |
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Sarah was put off continuing by her year in industry during her MChem degree. |
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The book contained some generally disputed theories, and its publication created a growing degree of popular controversy about Huxley's eyesight. |
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If any person, of what degree soever, high or low, shall deny or gainsay our Sovereign Lord. |
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The degree to which the French composer influenced the Englishman's style is debated. |
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The same month, Chaplin was invested with the honorary degree of Doctor of Letters by the universities of Oxford and Durham. |
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On 25 May 2014, she graduated from Brown University with a bachelor's degree in English literature. |
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Many of Shepard's illustrations can be matched to actual views, allowing for a degree of artistic licence. |
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This department covers all levels of education, from casual visitors, schools, degree level and beyond. |
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The use of dark marble for doorcases was also continued, giving the extensions a degree of internal consistency with the older rooms. |
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Organized cricket lends itself to statistics to a greater degree than many other sports. |
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Winning times had improved to such a degree that many felt further improvement by adding additional Arabian bloodlines was impossible. |
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Environmental magnetic methods have been established as a successful way of measuring the degree of pollution in air, water and soil. |
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In 2015, he received an honorary degree from the University of Bolton for his contributions to sport and charity. |
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In 2015, she was awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws degree by the University of Leeds. |
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In 2015, he was awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Engineering by Oxford Brookes University. |
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Exactly who had a right to use arms, by law or social convention, varied to some degree between countries. |
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Importance attached to the national day as well as the degree to which it is celebrated vary greatly from country to country. |
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Specifically, the degree to which decisions made by a sovereign entity might be contradicted by another authority. |
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Debate exists on the degree to which recognition should be included as a criterion of statehood. |
|
Control of the islands reverted to Denmark following the war, but in 1948 home rule was introduced, with a high degree of local autonomy. |
|
The dependencies that remain generally maintain a very high degree of political autonomy. |
|
It stipulated that Hong Kong would retain its laws and be guaranteed a high degree of autonomy for at least 50 years after the transfer. |
|
Hong Kong enjoys a high degree of religious freedom, guaranteed by the Basic Law. |
|
The table shows the areas and degree of autonomy and budgetary independence. |
|
A degree of domestic authority, and all foreign policy, remain with the UK Parliament in Westminster. |
|
The additional members produce a degree of proportionality within each region. |
|
In addition, 37 percent of Ireland population has a university or college degree, which is among the highest percentages in the world. |
|
It offers academic degrees at various levels and across a broad subject range, with over 300 degree programmes available. |
|
Although offering a range of degree courses, these colleges primarily provide training for those wishing to enter the teaching profession. |
|
It also provides teaching for students enrolled on the University of London LLB degree programme, via the International Programmes. |
|
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The circumstances of Scotland's acceptance of the Bill are to some degree disputed. |
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This aspect has received mixed treatment, with some confusion as to the degree of power required. |
|
The Australian embassy in Dublin states that up to 30 percent of the population claim some degree of Irish ancestry. |
|
It appears that these are associated with Pictish kings, which argues for a considerable degree of royal patronage and control of the church. |
|
Edward now enjoyed a degree of direct control in the native Welsh areas which no previous English king had achieved. |
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The United States also observes tribal sovereignty of the American Indian nations to a limited degree, as it does with the states' sovereignty. |
|
The most consistent practitioners of free trade have been Switzerland, the Netherlands, and to a lesser degree Belgium. |
|
Some degree of protectionism is nevertheless the norm throughout the world. |
|
But it was only after the adoption of improved tactics that some degree of mobility was restored. |
|
Thousands of persons suffer from agitophasia in some degree. This, in fact, is the most common of speech defect. |
|
The Celebes pig and, to a lesser degree, the anoa were the focus of the Wana's large game interests. |
|
The occasional early opening of the apricot blossom need not surprise us, if we consider this degree of heat upon the wall. |
|
Female ascetics find shelter in a wide variety of establishments and vary greatly in the degree to which they travel. |
|
This was the sole consideration, that afforded any degree of assuagement to her sufferings. |
|
To say that the lithosphere floats on top of the asthenosphere suggests a degree of easy buoyancy that isn't quite right. |
|
However, the degree of glutamine labelling was obviously low, and controls without rp39 showed autobiotinylation of the enzyme. |
|
Other post-bacc programs apply students' course work toward a master's degree. Tina decided not to enter an organized post-bacc program. |
|
In fact the latter are likely to develop muscles of the kind and strength that may even be a handicap to the Nth degree basketballer. |
|
The diagram indicates in some degree the relative amount of oral work as compared with bookwork in our best schools. |
|
Bedell Smith was a shopkeeper's son from Indiana who rose from buck private to general without the polish of West Point or a college degree. |
|
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As far as her own theories are concerned, she is limitlessly credulous, to a degree which makes me suspect that she is a cast-iron idiot. |
|
A number of trial fillings and catchweights may be necessary to obtain the desired degree of accuracy. |
|
Every commission of sin introduces into the soul a certain degree of hardness. |
|
Spreads on bond yields in a common currency today comove across emerging markets to a much higher degree than they did in the past. |
|
While some Yanks treated contrabands with a degree of equity or benevolence, the more typical response was indifference, contempt, or cruelty. |
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If they but knew it, almost all men in their degree, some time or other, cherish very nearly the same feelings towards the ocean with me. |
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A university can confer a degree upon a distinguished man because it can judge whether his degreeless condition is due to accident or not. |
|
The word red is an adjective, in the dogmatical or positive degree of comparison. |
|
The Lord has said that we will be blessed and will live in a degree of glory in the next life according to the eternal laws we obey in mortality. |
|
Judging from the autobiographical texts of these three authors, Natives often mixed assimilation with a degree of disassimilation. |
|
Mild to severe endo-and myocarditis was accompanied by a similar degree of epicarditis. |
|
They are all zealous to the last degree in support of the extreme policy.... They certainly will not err on the side of caution. |
|
The ratio of serum free T3 over free T4 may reflect the degree of extrathyroidal T4 to T3 conversion activity. |
|
Conversely, native Francien-speaking poets often displayed a degree of linguistic smugness and superiority. |
|
The superior degree of confidence towards Harriet, which this one article marked, gave her severe pain. |
|
Higher education students normally attend university from age 18 onwards, where they study for an academic degree. |
|
The first degree offered to undergraduates is the Bachelor's degree, which usually takes three years to complete. |
|
Under the Ostrogoths a considerable degree of Roman and Germanic cultural and political fusion was achieved. |
|
To a large degree, many of the extant legal records from the Germanic tribes seem to revolve around property transactions. |
|
Using the caravel, systematic exploration continued ever more southerly, advancing on average one degree a year. |
|
|
The English of neighbouring New Zealand has to a lesser degree become an influential standard variety of the language. |
|
Some degree of safety was provided by the safety lamp which was invented in 1816 by Sir Humphry Davy and independently by George Stephenson. |
|
Paraskos also founded a Yorkshire Studies degree course at Hull University. |
|
Other peoples had been in prolonged contact with the Roman civilization, and were, to a certain degree, romanized. |
|
Feudalism allowed the state to provide a degree of public safety despite the continued absence of bureaucracy and written records. |
|
Forty-seven-year-old homemaker and volunteer museum guide, holder of a master's degree in English, married twenty-three years to a professor. |
|
A small number of words that used to belong to the neuter class show some degree of gender confusion. |
|
It has not received the same degree of official recognition from the UK Government as Welsh. |
|
Consequently, the Dumnonii probably retained a greater degree of political autonomy than the forcibly conquered tribes living to the east. |
|
The start of Neolithic 1 overlaps the Tahunian and Heavy Neolithic periods to some degree. |
|
By 304 BC, the Romans had effectively annexed the greater degree of the Samnite territory, founding several colonies. |
|
The degree to which earlier native beliefs survived is difficult to gauge precisely. |
|
To lighten up the small dark rooms, tenants able to afford a degree of painted colourful murals on the walls. |
|
Aetius concentrated his limited military resources to defeat the Visigoths again, and his diplomacy restored a degree of order to Hispania. |
|
Sussex seems to have had a greater degree of decentralisation than other kingdoms. |
|
The modern division is based on the degree of mutual comprehensibility between the languages in the two branches. |
|
Although the power of a king is lesser in degree than an emperor, it is the similar in specie. |
|
First degree consanguinity applied in the case of Henry VIII and his brother's widow Catherine of Aragon. |
|
A conformist, he imposed a degree of obedience on the clergy that apparently alarmed even the Queen's ministers, such as Lord Burghley. |
|
In 1572, Raleigh was registered as an undergraduate at Oriel College, Oxford, but he left a year later without a degree. |
|
|
The very doctrine of modern freedoms have, to some degree, their origins in these acts. |
|
He left in June 1617 without taking a degree, immediately after the death of his father. |
|
A degree of domestic authority, and all foreign policy, remains with the UK Parliament in Westminster. |
|
Second, Cromwell gave a huge degree of freedom to his parliaments, although royalists were barred from sitting in all but a handful of cases. |
|
The Speaker between 1728 and 1761, Arthur Onslow, reduced ties with the government, though the office did remain to a large degree political. |
|
In his second year he dropped philosophy, and was awarded an upper second class Bachelor of Arts degree. |
|
The Louisiana Natural and Scenic Rivers System provides a degree of protection for 51 rivers, streams and bayous in the state. |
|
Some smaller settlements also enjoyed some degree of autonomy from regular administration as boroughs or liberties. |
|
Around 1189, the City gained the right to have its own mayor, later being advanced to the degree and style of Lord Mayor of London. |
|
These topographical factors have served to restrict urban spread, resulting in a relatively stable population size and a low degree of mobility. |
|
The software industry has been subject to a high degree of consolidation over the past couple of decades. |
|
There is usually some degree of restriction of the availability of certain therapeutic goods depending on their risk to consumers. |
|
In his final examination in January 1831 Darwin did well, coming tenth out of 178 candidates for the ordinary degree. |
|
Shortly before he completed his degree in 1921, he sat the entrance examination for St John's College, Cambridge. |
|
Instead he took up an offer to study for a Bachelor of Arts degree in mathematics at the University of Bristol free of charge. |
|
He was permitted to skip the first year of the course owing to his engineering degree. |
|
Penrose attended University College School and University College, London, where he graduated with a first class degree in mathematics. |
|
He was awarded his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1959 and began to undertake research in number theory supervised by Harold Davenport. |
|
Wiles earned his bachelor's degree in mathematics in 1974 at Merton College, Oxford, and a PhD in 1980 at Clare College, Cambridge. |
|
At the age of 21, Crick earned a Bachelor of Science degree in physics from University College London. |
|
|
Subject to their performance, students may then apply for an undergraduate degree or diploma. |
|
Caribbean societies are very different from other Western societies in terms of size, culture, and degree of mobility of their citizens. |
|
However, unlike the ten traditional branches, these are all controversial to a greater or lesser degree. |
|
English Opens Doors requires only a bachelor's degree in order to be considered for acceptance. |
|
In 1724, he graduated as a Bachelor of Arts and decided to pursue a Master of Arts degree. |
|
In August 1727, after taking his master's degree, Wesley returned to Epworth. |
|
Fisher earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1487 and in 1491, proceeded to a Master of Arts degree. |
|
Most had at least an undergraduate degree, and worked in a mix of white collar and blue collar jobs. |
|
However, many public universities in the world have a considerable degree of financial, research and pedagogical autonomy. |
|
Some students use online or distance education programs to earn this degree. |
|
Depending on the culture and the purpose of the listing, only the highest degree, a selection of degrees, or all degrees might be listed. |
|
It takes three years to earn a bachelor's degree and another one or two years to earn a master's degree. |
|
The system differentiates between a free master's degree and a master's degree in technology. |
|
In countries with only one doctoral degree, the degree of Kandidat Nauk should be considered for recognition as equivalent to this degree. |
|
The qualifications framework for higher education MECES is the reference framework adopted in Spain in order to structure degree levels. |
|
Before the Bologna Process after 4 or 5 years of study the academic degree of a Licentiate was reached. |
|
The standard first degree in England, Northern Ireland and Wales is the Bachelor's degree conferred with honours. |
|
Full information about the expectations for different types of UK degree is published by the Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education. |
|
See also graduate certificate, graduate diploma, postgraduate certificate, postgraduate diploma and British degree abbreviations. |
|
The standard undergraduate degree for natural and social science subjects is the Bachelor of Science. |
|
|
Students can work towards a first degree at either ordinary or honours level. |
|
Postgraduate qualifications are not designated Master of Arts as in the rest of the UK, as this is an undergraduate degree. |
|
Upon graduation, students receive a licenciatura in their chosen subject area, which is equivalent to an American Bachelor's degree. |
|
Articulation agreements may allow credit earned on an associate degree to be counted toward completion of a bachelor's degree. |
|
Most professional degree programs require a prior bachelor's degree for admission, and many require seven or eight years of total study. |
|
Undergraduate students in Brazilian universities graduate either with a bachelor's degree, a Licentiate degree or a Technologist degree. |
|
They are not able, by law, to authorise plans or drawings like engineers with a degree or architects. |
|
In Scotland, the first degree studied is free and paid for by the Scottish government. |
|
The degree is typically identical to the program of France's universities, as specified in the LMD reform. |
|
Bachelor's degree programs cover most of the fields in Algerian universities, except some fields, such as Medicine and Pharmaceutical Science. |
|
In 2012, a number of select colleges were upgraded to university status in a bid to increase the intake of students into the degree program. |
|
Especially now, in a culture that rewards self-aggrandizement to such a warped degree that some people find even their most grotesquely squalid distinctions aggrandizable. |
|
Guidelines recommend blood transfusions should be reserved for patients with or at risk of cardiovascular instability due to the degree of their anaemia. |
|
To the degree that my universe intersects with the Angelverse, I view Angel as far more than a creature tormented by blood cravings, past horrors, and mystical forces. |
|
But there was the greatest degree of harshness and injustice in the manner in which the conduct of the magistrates upon that occasion was animadverted upon by that House. |
|
Certain acts, such as the Pretty Things and the Creation, had a certain degree of chart success in the UK and are often considered exemplars of the form. |
|
One patient, in walking through the street, may be quite appalled at the approach of a runaway horse. The degree of appalment in another may be quite trifling. |
|
Some economists consider the Roman Empire a market economy, similar in its degree of capitalistic practices to 17th century Netherlands and 18th century England. |
|
However, a degree of vulnerability may be reflected in laws stating that they should not be forced into nunneries or second marriages against their will. |
|
The main feature of the system was its high degree of decentralisation. |
|
|
Johnson eventually found employment as undermaster at a school in Market Bosworth, run by Sir Wolstan Dixie, 4th Baronet who allowed Johnson to teach without a degree. |
|
In June 1853 Disraeli was awarded an honorary degree by Oxford University. |
|
International auxiliary languages such as Esperanto have not had a great degree of adoption globally so they cannot be described as global lingua francas. |
|
In 2005, Newell was presented with an honorary degree of Doctor of Arts by the University of Hertfordshire which has a campus in St Albans, his birthplace. |
|
The bloatings, the bowel distentions, the torments from gas retention, the inability to expel flatus, are all conspicuously absent and if present are so in a mild degree. |
|
It has been suggested there is a strong correlation between tourism expenditure per capita and the degree to which countries play in the global context. |
|
The appeal of the spectrally macabre is generally narrow because it demands from the reader a certain degree of imagination and a capacity for detachment from every-day life. |
|
These integrate teaching at master's level during the first one or two years of the degree, either alongside research or as a preliminary to starting research. |
|
Until that time, a single program that led to the doctorandus degree was in effect, which comprised the same course load as the bachelor's and Master's programs put together. |
|
A greater degree of crosslinking of the silicone polymers during the manufacturing process determines the firmness, or cohesivity, of the silicone gel. |
|
Doctoral applicants were previously required to have a master's degree, but many programs accept students immediately following undergraduate studies. |
|
In BTW, initiation only accepts someone into the first degree. |
|
To proceed to the second degree, an initiate has to go through another ceremony, in which they name and describe the uses of the ritual tools and implements. |
|
He sounds like a cult leader about to demand his followers drink poison. And it frankly doesn't help that he looks like Jim Jones to a genuinely creepy degree. |
|
Is there not also a degree of commonality with the Darth Vader units of Gatwick Express, which are likely to join the Southern fleet when the GatEx franchise is terminated? |
|
The third degree is the highest in BTW, and it involves the participation of the Great Rite, either actual or symbolically, and in some cases ritual flagellation. |
|
To obtain the licencjat degree, one must complete three years of study. |
|
When so admitted, the student is expected to have mastered the material covered in the master's degree despite not holding one, though this tradition is under heavy criticism. |
|
In 2002 Jeremy Smith and Robin Naylor of the University of Warwick conducted a study into the determinants of degree performance at UK universities. |
|
An academic degree is a qualification awarded on successful completion of a course of study in higher education, normally at a college or university. |
|
|
Such is the dispersedness of these rules and directions, that it seems a compilation of the kind could not be made with a reasonable degree of completeness. |
|
The degree can be compared both to the bachelor's and master's degree. |
|
Epilepsies, or fallings and reelings, and beastly vomitings. The least of these, even when the tongue begins to be untied, is a degree of drunkenness. |
|
A thesis of at least 15 ECTS credits must be included in the degree. |
|
His exacting taste required no small degree of outward perfection. |
|
The majority of master's degree holders have graduated from university. |
|
Well, some degree of the same pleasure may be experienced when one flabbergasts some romantic Schiller, by putting out one's tongue at him when he least expects it. |
|
A master's degree obtained at a polytechnic gives the same academic right to continue studies at Doctoral level as a master's degree obtained at a university. |
|
In the Netherlands, the degree MPhil is not legally recognised. |
|
He's wasting time at university not getting after his degree. |
|
More than twenty thousand participants have earned the bachelor of hamburgerology degree, with its golden arches appearing at the bottom of the certificate. |
|
The Dictionary was finally published in April 1755, with the title page acknowledging that Oxford had awarded Johnson a Master of Arts degree in anticipation of the work. |
|
Therefore, the legislation of a society is vital to maintain the maximum pleasure and the minimum degree of pain for the greatest number of people. |
|
Students are then able to work towards a postgraduate degree, which usually takes one year, or towards a doctorate, which takes three or more years. |
|
Within the United Kingdom, a unitary sovereign state, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales have gained a degree of autonomy through the process of devolution. |
|
Examination in mathematics was once compulsory for all undergraduates studying for the Bachelor of Arts degree, the main first degree at Cambridge in both arts and sciences. |
|
In countries in which only one doctoral degree exists, the degree of Doktor Nauk should be considered for recognition at the level of this degree. |
|
An honours degree may be directly linked to professional or vocational qualifications, particularly in fields such as engineering, surveying and architecture. |
|
Students on these courses specialise later in their degree programmes. |
|
As in the rest of the UK, Certificates and Diplomas of Higher Education may be earned by those completing one and two years of a bachelor's degree course respectively. |
|
|
It usually takes three years to read for a bachelor's degree. |
|
The foundation degree can be awarded by a university or college of higher education that has been granted foundation degree awarding powers by the UK government. |
|
This degree is comparable to an associate degree in the United States. |
|
Master of Engineering in particular has now become the standard first degree in engineering at the top UK universities, replacing the older Bachelor of Engineering. |
|
A Scottish ordinary degree is thus different from ordinary degrees in the rest of the UK in comprising a distinct course of study from the honours degree. |
|
Originally, in the universities of Oxford, Cambridge and Dublin, all undergraduate degrees were in the faculty of arts, hence the name of the degree. |
|
Many unitary states have no areas possessing a degree of autonomy. |
|
The Senate consists of all holders of the MA degree or higher degrees. |
|
The populations of the Persian Empire enjoyed some degree of freedom. |
|
He repaired and reinforced the wall with a degree of thoroughness that led most subsequent Roman authors to attribute the construction of the wall to him. |
|
The severity of PPF reflects host immunogenic response and degree of infection, which amplify splenic volume and consequently increase hyperflux in the spleno-portal region. |
|
The Slade is a department of University College London, where Chesterton also took classes in literature, but did not complete a degree in either subject. |
|
The first 250 years of the current era are the period during which Roman law and Roman legal science reached its greatest degree of sophistication. |
|
In addition, a graduate may wait an indeterminate time between degrees before candidacy in the next level, or even an additional degree at a level already completed. |
|
The term middle power has emerged for those nations which exercise a degree of global influence, but are insufficient to be decisive on international affairs. |
|
At this time Wessex took de facto control over much of Devon, although Britons retained a degree of independence in Devon until at least the 10th century. |
|
A subnational entity typically represents a division of the state proper, while a dependent territory often maintains a great degree of autonomy from the controlling state. |
|
The only Juris Doctor degree currently awarded by a UK university is at Queens University Belfast, perhaps in part due to Northern Ireland's peculiarity. |
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The League's monopolistic control over the economy of Norway put pressure on all classes, especially the peasantry, to the degree that no real burgher class existed in Norway. |
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All three languages are to a degree mutually intelligible and can be, and commonly are, employed in communication among inhabitants of the Scandinavian countries. |
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Individuals who hold either a bachelor's degree, Licentiate or Technologist are eligible for admission into graduate courses leading to advanced master's or doctor's degrees. |
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Public health is usually studied at the master's degree level. |
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Next, to investigate the degree of stimulated lipolysis, isoproterenol was injected interperitoneally and serum FFAs were measured before and 6 hours after the injection. |
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Coventry University is one of only a handful of universities to run a degree course in automotive design in the Coventry School of Art and Design. |
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Contrariwise, Sykes notes a high degree of commonality in Anglican liturgical forms, and in the doctrinal understandings expressed within those liturgies. |
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The degree to which each of the articles has remained influential varies. |
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There is also a change of direction funding in which a student can change course or degree after a year without imposing financial penalties or having to pay extra. |
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Repayment typically begins anywhere from six to twelve months after a student leaves school, regardless of whether or not they complete their degree program. |
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In some institutions and educational systems, some bachelor's degrees can only be taken as graduate or postgraduate degrees after a first degree has been completed. |
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In this way, we obtain fixed-parameter tractability and polynomial kernelizability results, with the central parameter being the maximum vertex degree. |
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In addition to high explosive and incendiary bombs the enemy would possibly use poison gas and even bacteriological warfare, all with a high degree of accuracy. |
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The degree is conferred after a successful dissertation defence. |
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Towards the end of the 18th century the entirely Protestant Irish Parliament attained a greater degree of independence from the British Parliament than it had previously held. |
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Nonetheless, it takes four to five years to complete a bachelor's degree. |
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For most degree programs, a research project and an internship period after which a report is written by the student is a must before the student is allowed to graduate. |
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Destined this day for fast-day, meo more, with that degree of abstinence which may best qualify my weak body to go through the day without molesting the soul. |
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Administrative divisions are granted a certain degree of autonomy and are usually required to manage themselves through their own local governments. |
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Mostly all autonomous government organisation confer a BTech degree and private institutes which are affiliated to regional universities confer BE degree. |
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An important factor of sovereignty is its degree of absoluteness. |
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Many other sports are also played and followed to a lesser degree. |
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