licentiate

NOUN
  1. holds a license (degree) from a (European) university
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How To Use licentiate In A Sentence

  • In 1984 he moved to Canada, where he did a masters in divinity and licentiate in moral theology at the University of Toronto.
  • Eventually, I graduated from the Conservatory in Havana; I won a Canada Council Grant to go to school at the University of Toronto, where I graduated with artist and licentiate diplomas.
  • In addition, there is a cadre of medical professionals called medical licentiates who are basically clinical officers who have taken further training so that they can help doctors though the training does not turn them into doctors.
  • He receives that licentiate of benchmark is woman of distrust of history, conversely more prominent of a … chapelhillnews. com | Authors promote literacy council Literacy News – 893th Edition « News « Literacy News
  • She is MTNA nationally certified in piano and music theory and earned the licentiate in piano teaching from The Royal Schools of Music.
  • Carlson's licentiate thesis (written at CUA in 1979*) was entitled The mission of the diocesan priest to preach in light of the Second Vatican Insight Scoop | The Ignatius Press Blog:
  • And Avery at that time gave something called a licentiate of instruction, which is equal to two years of college today, and I took that. Oral History Interview with Septima Poinsette Clark, July 25, 1976. Interview G-0016. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
  • This was done at his return from the little paltry town, even then when Master Antitus of Cressplots was licentiated, and had passed his degrees in all dullery and blockishness, according to this sentence of the canonists, Beati Dunces, quoniam ipsi stumblaverunt. Gargantua and Pantagruel, Illustrated, Book 2
  • Licentiate in Theology A three-year course allowing a choice of options within the theological field.
  • The other answered how he was called the licentiate, John Perez of Viedma, and, as he had heard, he was born in a village of the mountains of Leon. The Fourth Book. XV. Which Speaks of That Which After Befel in the Inn, and of Sundry Other Things Worthy to Be Known
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