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enrolled in/at/on university-department-course
Jul 10, 2010 · At my most restrictive, I enroll at a university if it's the location where I enroll. I enroll in, or perhaps on, a course. I do not enroll in, on, at, or any other preposition, a department. …
What's the right preposition to use with the verb "enroll"?
Jul 2, 2014 · Enroll at (a/an) = college, institute, university, name + school + at + the + school. Enroll in (a/an) = college, program, course, school, class, exchange program, choir, academy. …
Enrol for /on/ in (British English) | WordReference Forums
Feb 13, 2021 · A quick google using the British spelling (enrol) suggests that “enrol for” is the most common, followed by “enrol on” a course.
What's the difference between Enroll in and Sign up for?
Jan 13, 2022 · When I asked my native friend about the difference between Enroll in and Sign up for he gave me the following explanation: Sign up for: add your name to a list or sign up for a …
Enroll in/on a course - WordReference Forums
Sep 13, 2007 · I looked enroll up in the CALD and there was an example: "I enrolled for/in/on the modern art course." It seems all three of the prepositions are correct. I'd like to know when to …
The opposite of "enroll'' - WordReference Forums
Feb 16, 2016 · When you enroll your son, daughter, etc., in a school, you make all the arrangements, sign documents, etc., for him or her to study there. I'm looking for a word or …
single word requests - What is the opposite of "enroll"? - English ...
Jan 18, 2012 · Enroll can also be used passively/transitively, e.g. you can be enrolled onto a medical register- in which sense the antonym could be "strike off". Share Improve this answer
Difference between "Registration" and "Enrollment"
Jan 30, 2015 · In American universities, you "enroll" in the university once, when you enter and begin studies. Before each term (semester or quarter) begins, you "register" for the classes …
Enroll vs be enrolled in - WordReference Forums
May 1, 2019 · A. enroll B. enrolls C. is enrolled D. are enrolled If you use present tense then "(a) enroll" is correct and "(b) enrolls" is wrong. But present tense is not used much in English. …
enroll to a gym - WordReference Forums
Aug 13, 2008 · You enroll at a school, yes. (I agree with the opinions from eight years ago that you don't enroll at a gym.) It's a bit over-dramatic to say it that way. I would expect to hear …