Born under this shadow, the boy soon developed unusual qualities, graduated from Oxford, with high honors in chemistry and mineralogy, and added greatly to his reputation by a series of scientific papers of great importance.
Having decided to study theology, he, in the fall of the same year in which he graduated from Biddle, entered Princeton Theological Seminary.
So thrifty was Mr. Hewin, that when he graduated from school, he had a bank account of $1,375 to his credit.
He attended this institution eighteen months and graduated from it in June, 1886.
He remained in Benedict till the spring of 1883, when hegraduated from a classical course specially designed to fit him for a Northern college.
Graduated from University of Virginia; studied law in Richmond.
After receiving a common school education, he entered the Pennsylvania academy of fine arts, graduated from it with credit and later studied at the art students’ league of New York.
He graduated from Princeton in 1883, and was subsequently a student of the University of Jena in Germany.
After being trained in private schools of Augusta, Georgia, and Columbia, South Carolina, he graduated from Princeton in 1879, and then studied law at the University of Virginia.
Stayed in Wilno until I graduated from gymnasium, which is the equivalent of high school.
And you believed that until after the assassination and you read in the newspaper that he had not, in fact, graduated from Arlington?
George Hoadley, born in 1781; graduated from Yale; mayor New Haven; eight times mayor of Cleveland.
He graduated from Harvard (I am sorry there are so many Harvard men in this book: I didn't know they were Harvard men until too late) in 1898 and took his Ph.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "graduated from" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.