Galine
graduated or graduated from? Hi there, How do we usually say: “I graduated the university in 2005” or “I graduated from the university in 2005”? Probably both options are correct? Are there any differences then? Thanks a lot!
Nov 30, 2018 1:50 PM
Answers · 6
2
"from" is the only way that works for me but I'm British, maybe different in US
November 30, 2018
2
Both are correct in real life conversation and no one will ever notice. However, "graduated from xy university" is the grammatically correct form, while "graduated xy university" is incorrect. In writing, especially where it's important that your grammar is accurate, always use "from".
November 30, 2018
1
Both statements are fine, though "from" is more common.
November 30, 2018
1
In conversation, I would say "I graduated in 2005" as in the UK, it's generally only university that you graduate. I might say "I graduated from university in 2005" but I probably wouldn't use the definite article before "university". In AmE, it might be different.
November 30, 2018
I live in New Zealand. Here "graduated the university" is incorrect. I graduated in 2005. - fine I graduated from ... - fine
November 30, 2018
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