29 Verbs to Use for the Word academy

A year before he left the academy his first printed poem appeared in the Saturday Evening Post of Philadelphia.

From the first, he took a great fancy to Fernando and when he learned that he had come from the West to enter some academy or college, he informed him that he knew of the placethe very place.

That morning he had worked, as usual, over transfers, suspensions of employees, deportations, pardons, and the like, but had not yet touched the great question that had stirred so much interestthe petition of the students requesting permission to establish an academy of Castilian.

" "I should certainly not have permitted Olive and Cyril to attend the local academy but for your family," said Professor Lord.

"The petition of the students requesting authorization to open an academy of Castilian," answered the secretary.

"Athens saw them entering her gates and fill her academies.

I can say but in one word that the Association of Artists, of whom I am president, after negotiations of some weeks with the Academy of Fine Arts to come into it on terms of mutual benefit, find their efforts unavailing, and have separated and formed a new academy to be called, probably, the National Academy of the Arts of Design.

A small number this, gentlemen, to found an academy upon; and certainly, where the quantity is so small, we have a right to expect that the quality should be first-rate.

While Johnson kept his academy, I have not discovered that he wrote anything except a great portion of his tragedy of "Irene."

The promoters hoped to maintain there a model academy for the co-education of the races "on the manual labor system."

There are none of us who can assume to be the body of artists without giving offence to others, and still every one must perceive that, to organize an academy, there must be the distinction between professional artists, amateurs who are students, and professional students.

Is it an unfair inference that, if he had remained permanently in Charleston, so sad a fate would not have overtaken the infant academy?

On November 28, 1793, there was a prolonged wrangle over these issues at a cabinet meeting, which the President ended by saying that he would recommend the military academy to Congress, and "let them decide for themselves whether the Constitution authorized it or not."

(The first team was generally called the "varsity," though of course it only represented an academy.)

Human society, from this point of view, resembles a huge academy of learning, on the Bell and Lancaster system, opposed to the system of education by means of books and schools, as something artificial and contrary to the institutions of Nature.

Write to Washington respecting an Indian academy.

He now set up a private academy, for which purpose he hired a large house well situated near his native city.

He requested of Maupertuis to come to Berlin, to settle an academy, in terms of great ardour and great condescension.

So we started academies and colleges and even universities for him, and a medical school and a theological seminary.

If literature is not the essential requisite of the modern academick, I am yet persuaded, that Cambridge and Oxford, however degenerated, surpass the fashionable academies of our metropolis, and the gymnasia of foreign countries.

As a nucleus for his school, he took an old academy, the Kent County school, and, beginning the work of teaching, was so successful, that in 1782 the Legislature, on his application, granted the school a charter as Maryland's first college.

After his graduation he taught an academy at Fryeburg, for a time, and then began the study of the law,first at Salisbury, and subsequently in Boston, in the office of the celebrated Governor Gore.

I don't want any military academy; I 'd sooner go to seaanywhere where I can do something and be something.

Their prep school has beaten our academy both in football and basketball for the last five years; their city baseball team beat ours every time they played; they got ahead of us in the number of men who enlisted in the army, and they outdid us in the Liberty Loan.

In 1865, Mr. Fayette R. Buell began an academy for boys and girls at Westminster, Carroll County, and, in the spring of 1866, he proposed to the Conference of the Methodist Protestant Church, of which he was a member, that the school should be chartered as a college and taken under the Church's patronage.

29 Verbs to Use for the Word  academy