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  2. I am in the school and I am in school are different in meaning. When I talk about being in school, it means I am a student there. When I talk about being in the school (school building), it means I am not a student there. Maybe I am in the school to look around the school building or to see my father who is a teacher there.

  3. student — singular noun: "The student did well on the exam." students — plural noun: "The students did well on their exams." student's — singular possessive adjective: "The student's performance was excellent." students' — plural possessive adjective: "The students' exam scores were all fantastic!" Adding the apostrophe s to a noun ...

  4. meaning - What is the "learner": difference with "beginner",...

    ell.stackexchange.com/.../what-is-the-learner-difference-with-beginner-student

    A learner is not “mainly” any one of these things: it may signify any of them, and only the context in which the word is used will tell you which meaning is intended. For instance, you need only read half a dozen of the questions posted here to recognize that the learners to whom the site is addressed are a very diverse lot.

  5. You can write designation as "Student" In college we can see different level of persons like Teachers, Head of the Department, Principal, Peons and Students etc…If others have designation like Teacher, Head of the Department etc…Then Students Designation is “Student”.

  6. difference - As a student, he ... / When he was a student, he -...

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/329214/as-a-student-he-when-he-was-a-student-he

    "As a student" means "in his capacity as a student". So these two sentences are roughly the same: When he was a student, he worked hard. As a student, he worked hard. But these pairs of sentences are not the same: When he was a student, he was adequate. (He was adequate at something during the time he was a student.) As a student, he was adequate.

  7. Top student vs. Top-ranking student - WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/top-student-vs-top-ranking-student.3049286

    Jul 28, 2015. #3. To me, "the top student" or "the top-ranking student" would imply that you were in first place with the highest number of marks. Without the definite article, or as " a top-ranking student" the inference is more along the lines of among the top five. So, given the context you've supplied in the first paragraph, I'd choose:

  8. Meaning of "serious student" - English Language Learners Stack...

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/105761/meaning-of-serious-student

    2. serious. has the meaning of focussed, devoted, dedicated. a serious student. is one who is hard-working and diligently studies possibly to the exclusion of everything else. a serious girlfriend / boyfriend. is a partner in a relationship which is not casual and to whom one is devoted. a serious piece of work.

  9. I’m a student at the Computer Science Department. Meaning: this answers the question exactly by quoting the name of the department. The asker gets his answer and is now assured that there is indeed a Department in your college with the name "Computer Science". Or. I'm a student in Computer Science. Meaning: this tells about the stream of ...

  10. Boarder vs. resident student - WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/boarder-vs-resident-student.3333910

    English (US - northeast) Jun 14, 2017. #8. "Resident student" makes sense, to mean any student who resides on-campus. And "non-resident" means the opposite. But we don't use "boarder student" and "day student", and don't have the 3-way split in meanings that OP suggests. E.

  11. A 'Straight A' student is one that has achieved an A Grade across all subjects taken. Grades A-F is typical in many English speaking countries. Not so much in the rest of thew world. We usually grade by number (0-10), 10 being a perfect score and 0 complete failure. @cjm E is not normally skipped in the UK, FYI.