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enroll
[ en-rohl ]
verb (used with object)
- to write the name of (a person) in a roll or register; place upon a list; register:
It took two days to enroll the new students.
- to enlist (oneself ).
- to put in a record; record:
to enroll the minutes of a meeting; to enroll the great events of history.
- to roll or wrap up:
fruit enrolled in tissue paper.
- Nautical. to document (a U.S. vessel) by issuing a certificate of enrollment.
verb (used without object)
- to enroll oneself:
He enrolled in college last week.
Other 51Թ Forms
- ·DZİ noun
- e·DZ verb
- e·DZ verb
51Թ History and Origins
Example Sentences
Maria Town, president and chief executive of the American Assn. of People with Disabilities, told The Times that the system changes were not only hurting people’s ability to sign up and enroll for benefits.
“Public school students who are not enrolling in voucher programs, they are bearing the brunt of the cost in terms of, one, fewer dollars to spend on their educational needs,” Wething said.
By 1992, the skateboarding, spiky-haired teenager finally listened to his parents’ pleas and enrolled in college, which reunited him with his mother and Anne in San Diego.
Currently, eligible families have to apply for free school meals for their children, although a group of MPs recently called for them to be enrolled automatically.
Naiman, for one, feels especially fortunate to be in the room because he’s not actually enrolled in the class.
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