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4 alumni = graduate? 8 comments. 5 The recent move. 2 comments. 6 viewpoint. 2 comments ...
Alumni (sg.: alumnus (MASC) or alumna (FEM)) are former students or graduates of a school, college, or university. The feminine plural alumnae is sometimes used for groups of women, and alums ( sg. : alum ) or alumns ( sg. : alumn ) as gender-neutral alternatives.
The problem seems to be that you want to use the "alumni" category only for "graduate alumni". "Alumni" means both graduate alumni and non-graduate alumni. If you want to make a distinction, you need two non-overlapping categories. "Alumni" overlaps both. - Nunh-huh 01:42, 10 December 2007 (UTC)
University of Florida Emerson Alumni Hall. An alumni association or alumnae association is an association of graduates or, more broadly, of former students ().In the United Kingdom and the United States, alumni of universities, colleges, schools (especially independent schools), fraternities, and sororities often form groups with alumni from the same organization.
Jan Koum — billionaire entrepreneur, co-founder and CEO of WhatsApp; managing director at Facebook, Inc. (attended SJSU, but did not graduate) [87] Gordon Moore — scientist, author of Moore's Law [2] Roger Wakimoto — atmospheric scientist, tornado expert, director of NCAR and NSF [88]
A person should be included as a "notable alumna or alumnus" if the person would qualify for an article in his or her own right under Wikipedia: Notability (people)/WP:BIO. By implication, this means that each person listed in a "notable alumni" or "notable alumnae" section should have a wikilink, either red or blue.
An ad eundem degree (derived from ad eundem gradum, "to the same step or degree") is a courtesy degree awarded by a university or college to an alumnus of another. Rather than an honorary degree , it is a recognition of the formal learning for which the degree was earned at another college.
Alumni of the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, including alumni of constituent institutions, for example the Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies. Notes: "Alumni" (see Alumnus ) is used here in the (correct) broad sense, to include people who have spent a notable period of their career studying at the institution, not in a narrower ...