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collegiate

[ US /kəˈɫidʒɪt/ ]
[ UK /kəlˈiːd‍ʒɪət/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of or resembling or typical of a college or college students
    collegiate living
    collegiate clothes
    collegiate attitudes

How To Use collegiate In A Sentence

  • The success of women's sport, and particularly intercollegiate basketball, brings with it other issues stemming from the corrupting effects of success and money.
  • They are also skeptical about intercollegiate athletics and campus activities related to distance learning.
  • Once upon a time, in the heyday of unitards and medicine balls, intercollegiate games were private affairs, held in basement gyms or on remote lawns, and if anyone bothered to go and watch, it was an athlete's dad or girlfriend or roommate.
  • When we speak of intercollegiate sports, it is important to note that they have become so diverse that we must first group them into categories.
  • Doncaster regained third place in the league overtaking Sheffield Collegiate who did not have a league game.
  • Brandon had planned to be an education major while playing collegiate baseball.
  • Take advantage of this opportunity to network with fellow collegiate chapter members and learn more about music careers.
  • The National Collegiate Athletic Association introduced drug testing in the mid-1980s.
  • Passage of Title IX has enhanced the collegiate experiences of many women students.
  • Coming back home, he eschewed collegiate bowling in favor of tournament play, moving onto the megabucks circuit in 1997.
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