Wiktionary
n. (entrance examination English)
Usage examples of "entrance examinations".
If you worked hard, maybe you could take entrance examinations next summer and go in the fall.
I know what the entrance examinations are now, and I'll get the books and study and take those examina.
From almost the first day, Manfred was totally immersed in preparations for the entrance examinations of the university.
All semester long, he had dedicated himself along with his class to studying for the Todai entrance examinations.
From the same sources you may, if you wish, obtain free pamphlets which set forth the requirements for each academy, along with typical entrance examinations.
We will recommend however, stricter entrance examinations before admittance to the Academy, and an interview with a senior officer of the ship the cadet is initially assigned to, especially if the new candidate is from a world that has only recently been admitted to the Federation.
But Ellie had done spectacularly well on the standardized college entrance examinations and found to her surprise her teachers telling her that she was likely to be offered scholarships by well-known universities.
I have a couple of pupils who are preparing to try the Queen's Academy entrance examinations, and I don't like to leave them in the lurch or hand them over to the tender mercies of some third-class teacher who knows little Latin and less Greek.
Then there are fees for college entrance examinations and a separate fee for each university applied to.
He set me up for taking the entrance examinations, for which I returned to Atlanta one month later.
I knew I couldnt pass the most lenient of entrance examinations to an ordinary college, much less the dedicated place she represented.
This was held to be a cheap and enlightened arrangement, except by those malcontents who were actually mugged or assassinated and refused to see it as their social duty, and it enabled the city's thieves to plan a decent career structure, entrance examinations and codes of conduct similar to those adopted by the city's other professions- which, the gap not being very wide in any case, they rapidly came to resemble.