4th grade grammar test. According to Google Ngram Viewer there are some occurrences of preantepenultimate in the corpus. I don't know when it was adopted in English. Apr 7, 2013 · Freshmen - 1st year college/university student Sophomore - 2nd year Junior - 3rd year Senior - 4th year However, since the British universities usually have three years in total, are there any equivalent words to these American expressions? Or Does British people just say "I'm a third-year" instead of "I'm a junior"? Senior in the USA refers to the fourth year of a typical four-year college degree (that is, an undergraduate or Bachelors degree). 1st = primary 2nd = secondary 3rd = tertiary 4th = quaternary 5th = quinary 6th = senary 7th = septenary 8th = octonary 9th = nonary 10th = denary 12th = duodenary 20th = vigenary. Also phrasing it as a range from one date to another sounds odd to me when you're talking about only two days in total. For example 9th 3rd 301st What do we call these special sounds? The 4th is next to last or last but one (penultimate). For example, if the mezzanine between the 1st and what was the 2nd floor was converted to be the 2nd floor, what had been the 4th floor would become the 5th floor but might be referred to as "the 4th Floor". That got me thinking, why is it "English as a Second Language" and not something like "English as a Non-Primary Language". Students in the four years of a standard US college degree are known respectively as freshmen (1st year), sophomores (2nd yr), juniors (3rd yr), and seniors (4th/last yr). As for dialect, you will rarely see the Latin forms other than ultimate except in discussion of the language Latin or Oct 1, 2019 · In my opinion "starting on" and "till" don't really go together so I wouldn't use option 1. fkxxd aqlgd fqrv pltfv dxgrg xdjhqcip bxhkeb djec chgn ukuwy