释义 |
Examples:universities and colleges—colleges and universities—military training as a (sometimes compulsory) subject in schools and colleges—Grinnell College (private liberal arts college in Grinnell, Iowa, USA)—William A.P. Martin (1827-1916), American missionary who lived 62 years in China between 1850 and 1916, and helped found many Chinese colleges, first president of Beijing university—college for people who attend after work (lit.: spare-time college)—Deng Shichang (1849-1894), Qing dynasty naval specialist, founded naval dockyards and two naval colleges, died heroically in action against the Japanese—tier (for the ranking of universities and colleges)—teacher-training college—enter college after a competitive exam—college for professional training—Imperial College (or Academy), the highest educational body in Imperial China—modern languages (college department)—mandatory college exam for immigrants—change major (at college)—General Scholastic Ability Test (college entrance exam in Taiwan)—transfer to another college—be admitted to (a college etc)—enter a school or college—foundation of a University or College—college of western learning in late Qing—drop out (of college etc)—Mount Holyoke College (Northamptom, Massachusetts)—China's national college entrance examination—Northern Nationalities University NNU at Yingchuan, Ningxia (former Northwestern Second College for Nationalities)—teach (a college course)—seminary (Christian college)—the Imperial College (history)—Fuzhou Naval College, a.k.a. Foochow Naval Dockyard School, set up in 1866 by the Qing dynasty—Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, London—Anhui College of Traditional Chinese Medicine—Imperial College of Supreme Learning, established in 124 BC, and the highest educational institute in ancient China until the Sui Dynasty— |