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		Ask for help > Please, help me     
			
		 Please, help me 
		
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 Esperanza1987
 
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							| Please, help me 
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							| How do you say 
 Degrees with Distinction or Degrees with Honors? Or it is the same ones?Thanks a lot in advance
 Regards,
 Esperanza
 
 
 |  31 Mar 2010      
					
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 roadrunnerr
 
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							| In my modest opinion, degrees with distinction differs from degrees with honors in the way that degrees with distinction has a higher rank in usage than degrees with honors. |  31 Mar 2010     
					
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 emulator
 
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							|   magna cum laude: (adj) with high honor; with high academic distinction; "a magna cum laude graduate"(adv) with high honor; "he graduated magna cum laude"   summa cum laude: (adj) with highest honor; with the highest academic distinction; "a summa cum laude graduate"                                (adv) with highest honor; "he graduated summa cum laude"   and pronounced /magnə kʌm "lɔ:di:/ and /sʌmə kʌm "lɔ:di:/ I just copied, pasted from different dictionaries! Hope it helps |  31 Mar 2010     
					
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 MarianaC
 
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							| honours is also an extra semester you can study, within the same uni undergraduate degree. It �s like a specialty course, where the grad does some research work on a given area... you can only do it if you �ve finished your degree, but it �s not a masters or a PhD... |  1 Apr 2010     
					
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 ameliarator
 
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							| Maybe it �s different in different systems; here people often refer to "graduating with honors" |  1 Apr 2010     
					
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