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matriculate
[ verb muh-trik-yuh-leyt; noun muh-trik-yuh-lit ]
verb (used with object)
- to enroll in a college or university as a candidate for a degree.
- to register (a coat of arms), used especially in Scottish heraldry.
verb (used without object)
- to be matriculated.
noun
- a person who has been matriculated.
matriculate
verb
- to enrol or be enrolled in an institution, esp a college or university
- intr to attain the academic standard required for a course at such an institution
noun
- Also calledmatriculant a person who has matriculated
Derived Forms
- maˈtricuˌlator, noun
Other Words From
- ma·tricu·lation noun
- ma·tricu·lator noun
- rema·tricu·late verb rematriculated rematriculating
- unma·tricu·lated adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of matriculate1
Word History and Origins
Origin of matriculate1
Example Sentences
I need it to matriculate into the master's programme I was accepted into at Columbia.
“I hope that women keep getting out there running, hiking, matriculating, climbing, working, and living their lives as they deserve,” Rennison said in an email.
It was only when I had matriculated and moved to New York City as a journalism major that I began to become haunted by the sound of my own voice.
The new study showed that’s part of it: One-third of the difference in attendance rates was because middle-class students were somewhat less likely to apply or matriculate.
Groban was accepted to Carnegie Mellon University’s prestigious music theater program, but his burgeoning singing career didn’t allow him to matriculate for long.
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