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  • Whats the right preposition to use with the verb enroll?
    if you enrol at a school or other institution, or if someone enrols you there, you put your name on the official list of its students or members enrol at: Andrew cannot enrol at his local school because the class is full enrol someone in on something: Isabelle enrolled her brother in a training programme for engineers
  • Whats the difference between attend and enrol? [closed]
    'Attending' is used almost solely with a more stative sense; 'Johnny had always dreamed of going to a college in Elbonia' Not 'Johnny is attending school in ten minutes ' 'Enrol' can be found in any dictionary –
  • Difference between Registration and Enrollment
    enrol on the modules you will be studying during the year Basically, the terms do have different connotations, they're not quite synonyms though conflated in practice Your selection of the term enrollment however seems correct, if the students username and credentials are established elsewhere
  • Whats the difference between Enroll in and Sign up for?
    To enrol (one 'l') in something is to register yourself as a member of a society or a student on a course Sign up , as your friend says, just means to add your name to a list It could refer to enrolment or just putting your name down to go on a group outing, volunteer to help with a project etc
  • When double l is considered American English?
    in enrol enroll and enrolment enrolment (and a few other such words, such as fulfil fulfill and fulfilment fulfillment), the <l> spelling is British and the <ll> spelling is American; in words like traveled travelled and labeled labelled, the <l> spelling is American and the <ll> spelling is British
  • single word requests - What is the opposite of enroll? - English . . .
    Disenroll, "To cancel enrolment; to remove oneself from a list" may be the word you want It is in common use, for example as a bit of legal jargon for leaving an insurance plan:
  • phrase requests - A better way to say enrolled in a program to . . .
    Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
  • Is it correct to say I kindly request you to. . . ?
    This is a different and fairly widely-used usage, as tchrist says in his answer Indeed, in 'would you kindly just give up your seat for my great-grandmother', kindly and just are two of the hedging devices (pragmatic markers subset politeness) (the third device is the would you construction) (and the fourth, the winning smile)


















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