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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]
    What's the difference between "attend" and "enrol"? [closed] Ask Question Asked 7 years, 8 months ago Modified 7 years, 8 months ago
  • 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
  • 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
  • single word requests - What is the opposite of enroll? - English . . .
    Deenroll? Unenroll? I understand words like cancel and resign would work, but is there an appropriate antonym with "enroll" in it?
  • 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
  • phrase requests - A better way to say enrolled in a program to . . .
    A better way to say "enrolled in a program" to signify the difficulty of attaining admission in the face of stiff competition?
  • Is it correct to say I kindly request you to. . . ?
    It seems like everyone is hung up on whether "request you to" is correct grammar Nobody has answered the kernel of the question which, I think, is whether kindness is implied in any request I don't think it is A request is not implicitly kind or unkind So "kindly" adds just as much to the sentence as "humbly "




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