Examples of 'agrégé' in a sentence
Meaning of "agrégé"
Agrégé (noun): a term used in French referring to a person who has passed a competitive exam to become a professor
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- In France, a civil servant who teaches as a professor.
How to use "agrégé" in a sentence
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agrégé
Professor agrégé in faculties of law.
At the age of 20, he became an agrégé in history.
Agrégé in public law.
Professor agrégé des Lycées.
The agrégé title required passing a rigorous examination that was necessary for becoming a professor of philosophy.
The highest qualification is that of agrégé de l'enseignement supérieur / geaggregeerde voor het hogar enderwijs.
Agrégé of the Faculty of Law.
Didier Julia is doctor of State in Literature, agrégé in philosophy and university professor.
Professeur agrégé in industrial sciences of the engineer and mechanical engineeringMSGMGC.
They had two children together, Michel, another Normalien, agrégé in mathematics, and Nathalie, pianist.
Agrégé in History PhD.
Dominique Julia is a former student of the École normale supérieure ( class 1960 Lettres ) and agrégé d'histoire.
Albanel is agrégé in classical Letters.
A graduate of the Ecole Normale Supérieure ( ENS Lyons ), agrégé in geography, he is.
Agrégé in Philosophy.
See also
Christian GRELLOIS, professeur agrégé de droit public à i & apos ; Université MontesquieuBordeau IV ( France ).
An agrégé of history, he abandoned teaching to engage in journalism.
A professor agrégé of history, he soon preferred journalism to the Éducation nationale.
He was an agrégé in philosophy, contemporary with Henri Vaugeois and Louis Dimier.
Agrégé de lettres in 1853, he translated volumes IV and V of the Bhagavata Purana.