University
Sorunu sor hemen cevaplansın.
university teriminin İngilizce Türkçe sözlükte anlamı
- üniversite
Örnek Cümle:
Aptal oğlumun ne yaptığını biliyor musun? Şimdi bile o üniversiteden mezun olup iş bulmak yerine tüm zamanını pachinko oynayarak geçiriyor.
-You know what my idiot son's doing? Even now he's graduated from university he spends all his time playing pachinko instead of getting a job.
Örnek Cümle:
Harvard Üniversitesi, 1636'da kuruldu.
-Harvard University was founded in 1636.
- (isim) üniversite
- birdem
- darülfünun
- bilgiyurd
- universite spor takımı
- evrenkent
- üniversitelerarası
- üniversite de
- university students
- üniversiteliler
- university admission
- Üniversite giriş
Üniversite giriş sınavı.
- university media centre
- üniversite medya merkezi
- university of arizona
- arizona üniversite
- university of cambridge
- Cambridge Üniversitesi
- university of chicago
- Chicago Üniversitesi
- university of florida
- Florida Üniversitesi
- university of kentucky
- Kentucky Üniversitesi
- university of paris
- paris üniversite
- university of tennessee
- Tennessee Üniversitesi
- university of tokyo
- tokyo üniversite
- university press
- üniversite basın
- university student
- üniversite öğrencisi
- university subject
- üniversite konusu
- university autonomy
- üniversite özerkliği
- university band
- üniversite müzik grubu
- university banking
- (Ticaret) üniversite bankacılığı
- university days
- üniversite günleri
- university degree
- yükseköğrenim diploması
- university drop out
- üniversite terk
- university entrance date
- üniversiteye giriş tarihi
- university entrance exam
- üniversiteye giriş sınavı
- university fee
- üniversite harcı
- university libraries
- üniversite kütüphaneleri
- university of aberdeen
- (Eğitim) aberdeen üniversitesi
- university payments
- (Ticaret) üniversite ödemeleri
- university preference form
- (Eğitim) üniversite tercih formu
- university publications
- üniversite yayınları
- university student
- üniversiteli
- university years
- üniversite yılları
- university zone
- üniversite bölgesi
- enter university
- üniversiteye girmek
- foundation university
- vakıf üniversitesi
- technical university
- teknik üniversitesi
- universities
- üniversiteler
Japonya'da öğrencilerin üniversitelere girmek için zor sınavlara girmeleri gerektiği tüm dünyada bilinmektedir.
-It is known all over the world that, in Japan, students have to take difficult entrance examinations to enter universities.
Bu ülkede üniversiteler bile ücretsiz.
-In this country, even universities are free of charge.
- Anadolu University
- Anadolu Birdemi
- Anadolu University
- Anadolu Üniversitesi
- Open University
- açıköğretim
- graduate of the university
- birdem mezunu
- Karabuk University
- Karabük Üniversitesi
Ben.
- a lawyer straight from university
- üniversite düz bir avukat
- an university
- Bir üniversite
- applicant for a place at university
- üniversitede bir yer için başvuru
- concordia university
- Concordia Üniversitesi
- distance learning university
- Uzaktan eğitim veren üniversite
- enter the university
- üniversite kazanmak
- free university
- özgür üniversite
- george mason university
- George Mason Üniversitesi
- helsinki university of technology
- Helsinki Teknoloji Üniversitesi
- london university
- Londra Üniversitesi
- middle east technical university
- Orta Doğu Teknik Üniversitesi
- middle east technical university
- Orta Doğu Teknik Üniversitesi ya da kısaca ODTÜ, Türkiye Cumhuriyeti'nde 15 Kasım 1956'da tarihinde kurulan bir üniversite. 2007 yılında yapılan bir araştırmaya göre, dünyanın en iyi 1,000 üniversitesi arasında 438. olarak, Türkiye'de en iyi derece elde eden üniversite olmuştur
- new york university
- New York Üniversitesi
- pre-university
- Üniversite öncesi
- private university
- Özel üniversite
- state university
- Devlet üniversitesi
- Joint Special Operations University
- (Askeri) Müşterek Özel Harekat Üniversitesi
- National Defense University
- (Askeri) Milli Savunma Üniversitesi
- air university
- (Askeri) HAVA ÜNİVERSİTESİ: ABD Hava Kuvvetleri Komutanlığının büyük bir komutanlığı. Bu komutanlığın görevleri şunlardır: Subayları Hava Kuvvetleri büyük birliklerine, üs, grup ve filolara komuta edecek şekilde ve bu komutanlık mevkilerine özel karargah görevleri için hazırlamak; Hava kuvvetlerinin fenni ve teknik ihtiyaçlarını karşılayacak bilgileri vermek; Hava sağlık hizmeti hakkında bilgi vermek ve Hava Kuvvetlerinin doktrin, eğitim ve araştırma merkezi olarak çalışmak
- enter the university
- üniversiteye kapağı atmak
- establish a university
- üniversite açmak
- faculty of open university
- (Eğitim) açıköğretim fakültesi
- open university
- açık öğretim fakültesi
- residential university
- yatılısı olan üniversite
İlgili Terimler
university teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- Institution of higher education (typically accepting students from the age of about 17 or 18, depending on country, but in some cases able to take younger students in exceptional cases) where subjects are studied and researched in depth and degrees are offered
- a general school of liber arts {n}
- establishment where a seat of higher learning is housed, including administrative and living quarters as well as facilities for research and teaching
- An institution organized and incorporated for the purpose of imparting instruction, examining students, and otherwise promoting education in the higher branches of literature, science, art, etc
- An institution which may be the same as a college, but which usually offers graduate degrees in addition to undergraduate degrees A university will generally have a larger student population, offer more degrees and have more research facilities than a college
- a large and diverse institution of higher learning created to educate for life and for a profession and to grant degrees
- A postsecondary institution which has several colleges or schools, grants graduate degrees, and may have research facilities
- empowered to confer degrees in the several arts and faculties, as in theology, law, medicine, music, etc
- A large postsecondary institution that offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs
- educational institution, institution of higher learning authorized to grant academic degrees, college; physical buildings and grounds of a university; teachers and students and other staff of a university {i}
- The universe; the whole
- An institution of higher education comprised of one or more undergraduate colleges, a graduate program, and one or more professional schools Authorized to offer degrees at several levels including bachelor's, master's, doctoral and the first professional
- A university is an institution where students study for degrees and where academic research is done. Patrick is now at London University They want their daughter to go to university, but they are also keen that she get a summer job The university refused to let Dick Gregory speak on campus. W1S2 universities an educational institution at the highest level, where you study for a degree go to university (=study at a university) at university. Institution of higher education, usually comprising a liberal arts and sciences college and graduate and professional schools that confer degrees in various fields. A university differs from a college in that it is usually larger, has a broader curriculum, and offers advanced degrees in addition to undergraduate degrees. The first true university was the University of Bologna, founded in the 11th century; the first in northern Europe was the University of Paris, which served as a model for the universities of Oxford, Cambridge, Heidelberg, and others. One of the first modern universities, in which secular objectivity and rationalism replaced religious orthodoxy, was the University of Halle (founded 1694 in Halle, Ger.). The liberalism of Halle was adopted by Göttingen, Berlin, and many other German universities. The German model of the university as a complex of schools and research institutes also exerted a worldwide influence. The growth of universities in the U.S., where most colleges had been established by religious denominations, was greatly spurred by the Morrill Act of 1862. Acadia University Alberta University of Australian National University Azhar University al Beijing University Berlin University of Humboldt University of Berlin Bishop's University Bologna University of Brigham Young University British Columbia University of Brown University Calgary University of California University of Cambridge University of Carnegie Mellon University Chicago University of Colgate University Columbia University Cornell University Dalhousie University Dublin University of Duke University Edinburgh University of Emory University Gallaudet University Geneva University of Georgetown University Glasgow University of Guelph University of Harvard University Hebrew University of Jerusalem Howard University Johns Hopkins University Laval University Leipzig University of London University of Louvain Catholic University of Manchester Victoria University of Manitoba University of McGill University McMaster University Melbourne University of Memorial University of Newfoundland Mexico National Autonomous University of Michigan University of Montreal University of Moscow State University Munich University of New Brunswick University of New School University New York State University of Northwestern University Notre Dame University of Ohio State University Oxford University of Paris University of Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania State University Princeton University Queen's University at Kingston Regents of the University of California v. Bakke Rice University Ryerson Polytechnic University Saint Andrews University of Saskatchewan University of Simon Fraser University Texas University of Tokyo University of Toronto University of Tuskegee University Vanderbilt University Victoria University of Vienna University of Virginia University of Washington and Lee University Washington University Waterloo University of Wesleyan University Western Ontario University of Yale University Yeshiva University York University Göttingen University of Heidelberg University of
- An educational institution of the highest level, typically with one or more undergraduate schools or colleges
- An event at which the principal focus is a variety of classes offered throughout the day Also called Collegium or Schola
- An educational establishment offering courses of further study
- The part of the academic organizational structure that, on an organizational chart, is the top level An accredited academic institution Historically, a group of colleges and schools offering many disciplines under one governance
- Organization devoted to staging events where the major activity is a series of workshops on the various skills and areas of knowledge valued in the Society, and to keeping records of individual efforts at such events The term may also refer to an event conducted by such a group (See Collegium )
- A university may exist without having any college connected with it, or it may consist of but one college, or it may comprise an assemblage of colleges established in any place, with professors for instructing students in the sciences and other branches of learning
- A large, educational institution comprising a number of divisions, including graduate and professional schools Research is usually an important part of universities Academic offerings are usually more comprehensive than at smaller colleges
- A four-year institution, sometimes comprised of a cluster of "colleges," offering programs leading to the Bachelor's Degree Differs from a college in that it may offer advanced (MA, PhD) or a professional (MD, JD) degrees
- An association, society, guild, or corporation, esp
- Though we use the term "college" to describe all post-secondary schools, you may be applying to universities as well as colleges There can be some important differences: Universities generally support both undergraduate and graduate programs and tend to be larger than colleges You may find more research opportunities at a university, but you might get more attention from professors at a college
- 126 EAST FOSTER AVENUE
- University education is defined here as education leading to a 4-year undergraduate degree or graduate degree
- An institution of higher education that awards undergraduate and graduate degrees Often used interchangeably with "College"
- the body of faculty and students at a university
- A collection of colleges, each specializing in a different field
- Means a public or nonprofit approved or accredited institution for instruction and study in the higher branches of learning and empowered to confer degrees in special departments or colleges
- An institution of advanced learning that offers various taught and research programmes
- an institution of higher education, usually offering degree and higher level courses Some universities also offer vocational education and training courses
- Post secondary institutions offering degree (four year programs) and post graduate level work In British Columbia there are six universities: • University of British Columbia • University of Victoria • Simon Fraser University • University of Northern British Columbia • Trinity Western • Royal Roads (offer only third and fourth year levels)
- la universidad
- one capable of having and acquiring property
- uni
- university of life
- The real world as a source of instruction, as opposed to a formal education
I learned all I need to know from the university of life, not from books.
- university admission
- College admissions or university admission is the process through which students enter post-secondary education at universities and colleges. The system varies widely from country to country
- University of Alabama
- large public university in Alabama with three campuses (in Birmingham, Tuscaloosa, and Huntsville)
- University of Alaska
- large public university in Alaska with three campuses (in Anchorage, Fairbanks, and Southeast)
- University of Alberta
- Canadian public university in Edmonton. Opened in 1908, it is one of Canada's five largest research universities. It offers undergraduate and graduate programs in liberal arts, agriculture and forestry, science and engineering, business, law, education, and the health professions. Special programs include the School of Native Studies and the Faculté Saint-Jean, which conducts all study in French and also offers a bilingual Bachelor of Commerce degree
- University of Arizona
- large public university located in Tucson (Arizona, USA)
- University of Arkansas
- large public university located in Fayetteville (Arkansas, USA)
- University of Berlin
- or Humboldt University of Berlin Public university in Berlin, Germany. It was founded (as Friedrich Wilhelm University) in 1809-10 by Wilhelm, baron von Humboldt. By the mid 1800s it had attained world renown for its modern curriculum and its scientific research institutes. Among its faculty were G.W.F. Hegel, Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Arthur Schopenhauer, Leopold von Ranke, Hermann von Helmholtz, Friedrich Schleiermacher, and Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm. In the 1930s it was Nazified, and many of its faculty fled abroad. Under the German Democratic Republic after World War II, it was renamed Humboldt University and given a Marxist-Leninist orientation. It was reorganized after East and West Germany reunified in 1990
- University of Bologna
- Oldest university in Europe, founded in Bologna, Italy, in 1088. It became in the 12th-13th centuries the principal centre for studies in civil and canon law, and it served as a model for the organization of universities throughout Europe. Its faculties of medicine and philosophy were formed 1200. The faculty of science was developed in the 17th century. In the 18th century women were admitted as students and teachers. The modern university includes faculties of law, political science, economics, letters and philosophy, natural sciences, agriculture, medicine, and engineering
- University of British Columbia
- Canadian public university in Vancouver. It is one of the largest universities in Canada and the oldest in the province (founded 1908). It comprises faculties of agricultural sciences, applied science, arts, commerce and business administration, dentistry, education, forestry, graduate studies, law, medicine, pharmacy, theology, and science. Plant research is conducted at the UBC Botanical Garden, which is open to the public. The university has extensive study-abroad and continuing-education programs
- University of Calgary
- Public university in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. It was founded in 1945 as part of the University of Alberta and gained full autonomy in 1966. It has faculties of education, engineering, environmental design, fine arts, graduate studies, humanities, law, management, medicine, nursing, physical education, science, social sciences, and social work. It has special programs devoted to space research, international development, gifted education, and world tourism
- University of California
- large public university system with 11 campuses throughout the state of California (USA)
- University of California
- U.S. public university with campuses at Berkeley (main campus), Davis, Irvine, Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego (La Jolla), San Francisco, Santa Barbara, and Santa Cruz. Established in 1868 in Oakland, it has become one of the largest university systems in the U.S. In the 1930s research at the Berkeley campus produced the first cyclotron, the isolation of the human polio virus, and the discovery of several new chemical elements. The Berkeley campus remains a leader in scientific fields as well as in many other academic areas. The Los Angeles branch (UCLA), founded in 1919, includes schools of law, medicine, and engineering. The San Francisco campus, originally the university's Medical Center (1873), has schools of medicine, nursing, dentistry, and pharmacy. The San Diego campus, founded as a marine station, became part of the university in 1912; it includes the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. The Davis and Riverside campuses grew out of agricultural institutes and were both added in 1959. The Santa Barbara campus was granted university status in 1944, those at Santa Cruz and Irvine in 1965. The university operates the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (both nuclear research centres) and the Los Alamos National Laboratory
- University of California at Los Angeles
- {i} UCLA, public university located in Los Angeles (California, USA)
- University of Cambridge
- Autonomous institution of higher learning in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England. Its beginnings lie in an exodus of scholars from the University of Oxford in 1209. Its first college was built in 1284, and the university was officially recognized by the pope in 1318. From 1511 Desiderius Erasmus did much to inculcate the new learning of the Renaissance at Cambridge. In 1546 Henry VIII founded Trinity College, which remains the largest of Cambridge's 31 colleges. From 1669 Isaac Newton taught mathematics, giving this field a unique position there. In 1871 James Clerk Maxwell accepted the chair of experimental physics, beginning a leadership in physics that would continue into the next century. A host of world-renowned scholars in other fields have also taught at Cambridge, including John Maynard Keynes in economics and Stephen W. Hawking in applied mathematics and theoretical physics. Many of the university's buildings, including the famous King's College Chapel and two chapels designed by Christopher Wren, are rich in history and tradition. The library houses numerous important collections, and the Fitzwilliam Museum contains noteworthy collections of antiquities
- University of Cambridge
- {i} famous university located in Cambridge (England)
- University of Chicago
- Independent university in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. It was founded in 1890 with an endowment from John D. Rockefeller. William Rainey Harper, its first president (1891-1906), did much to establish its reputation, and under Robert M. Hutchins (1929-51) the university came to be recognized for its broad liberal arts curriculum. The world's first department of sociology was established there in 1892 under Robert E. Park. In 1942 it was the site of the first controlled self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction, under the direction of Enrico Fermi. Other notable achievements include the development of carbon-14 dating and the isolation of plutonium. More than 70 scholars associated with the University of Chicago have been awarded Nobel Prizes in their fields. The university comprises an undergraduate college, several professional schools, and centres for advanced research, including the Oriental Institute (Middle Eastern studies), Yerkes Observatory, the Enrico Fermi Institute, and the Center for Policy Study. The university operates the Argonne National Laboratory
- University of Cincinnati
- {i} large university located in Ohio (USA)
- University of Colorado
- large public university system with 4 main campuses throughout the state of Colorado (USA)
- University of Connecticut
- {i} UConn, public university located in Storrs (Connecticut, USA)
- University of Delaware
- large public university located in Newark (Delaware, USA)
- University of Dublin
- or Trinity College Oldest university in Ireland, founded in 1592 by Elizabeth I and endowed by the city of Dublin. Trinity was originally intended to be the first of many constituent colleges of the university, but no others were established, and the two names became interchangeable. The full benefits of the university (degrees, fellowships, scholarships, etc.) were for many years limited to Anglicans, but in 1873 all religious requirements were eliminated. The university has faculties of arts (humanities and letters), sciences, business, economic and social studies, engineering and systems sciences, health sciences, and graduate studies. The library contains many illuminated manuscripts, including the Book of Kells
- University of Edinburgh
- Private university in Edinburgh, Scotland. It was founded as a college under Presbyterian auspices in 1583 and achieved university status 1621 after a divinity school was added. Schools of medicine and law were added in the early 18th century, and faculties of music, science, arts, social sciences, and veterinary medicine were subsequently established. The university has produced a long line of eminent cultural figures, including Sir Walter Scott, John Stuart Mill, Thomas Carlyle, Charles Darwin, David Hume, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Alexander Graham Bell
- University of Florida
- large public university located in Gainesville (Florida, USA)
- University of Geneva
- Institution of higher learning in Geneva, Switzerland. It was founded by John Calvin and Théodor de Bèze (1519-1605) in 1559 as Schola Genevensis (later called the Academy), a theological seminary. The natural sciences, law, and philosophy were later added to the curriculum, and in the 19th century a medical faculty was established. In the 1930s the Institut Jean-Jacques Rousseau, a private school of education founded in 1912, became part of the university. Many foreign students are attracted by its strong reputation in international studies, botany, and education
- University of Georgia
- large public university located in Athens (Georgia, USA)
- University of Glasgow
- Public university in Glasgow, Scotland. It was founded in 1451 and reorganized in 1577. In the 18th century its faculty included such eminent figures as Adam Smith and James Black; James Watt was an assistant there. In the 19th century the faculty included Joseph Lister and William Thomson (Lord Kelvin). The university faculties represent the arts, divinity, law, medicine, science, veterinary medicine, and engineering. The rector is elected triennially by the students
- University of Guelph
- Public university in Guelph, Ont. , Can. It is an important centre for research in scientific agriculture, having been established (1964) through the merger of Ontario Agricultural College (1874), Ontario Veterinary College (1862), and a newly created liberal arts college. Facilities include the headquarters of the Canadian Network of Toxicology Centres, a centre for the study of livestock genetics, and a gerontology research centre
- University of Göttingen
- German Georg-August-Universität zu Göttingen Eminent European university, founded in 1737 in Göttingen, Germany. It was one of the first and most influential secular universities. In the late 18th century it was the centre of the Göttinger Hain, a circle of poets who were forerunners of German Romanticism. In the late 19th century its Mathematical Institute, headed at various times by Carl Friedrich Gauss, Bernhard Riemann, and David Hilbert, attracted students from all over the world. In the 20th century its physics faculty included Max Born, Werner Heisenberg, and Max von Laue
- University of Hawaii
- large public university that has three main campuses and several satellite campuses in various locations in Hawaii (USA)
- University of Heidelberg
- German Ruprecht-Karl-Universität Heidelberg Autonomous university at Heidelberg, Germany. It was founded in 1386 and modeled on the University of Paris. The first college was founded by the Cistercian order. The university suffered a decline in the 17th-18th centuries but regained its prestige after a reorganization in the early 19th century, becoming a centre of sciences, law, and philosophy
- University of Idaho
- large public university that has its main campus in Moscow and four smaller campuses throughout the state of Idaho (USA)
- University of Illinois
- public university system that operates three main campuses and two medical schools in the state of Illinois (USA)
- University of Iowa
- large public university located in Iowa City (USA)
- University of Kansas
- KU, large public university located in Lawrence (Kansas, USA)
- University of Kentucky
- {i} UK, large public university located in Lexington (Kentucky, USA)
- University of Leipzig
- State-supported university in Leipzig, Germany, founded in 1409. In the 1500s it was a centre of Reformation thought, and in the 18th and 19th centuries it became one of Europe's leading literary and cultural centres, attracting such students as Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Johann Gottlieb Fichte, and Richard Wagner. Between 1953 and 1990 it was named Karl Marx University of Leipzig
- University of London
- London University. Federation of more than 50 British institutions of higher learning, located primarily in London, England. It was established by liberals and religious dissenters in 1828, and it accepted for enrollment Roman Catholics, Jews, and other non-Anglicans. The first two colleges were University College and King's College. From 1849 a student enrolled in any university in the British Empire could be awarded a University of London degree after examination. By the early 20th century many institutions had become affiliated with the university, including Bedford College, the first British university to grant degrees to women; the London School of Economics and Political Science, now an internationally renowned centre for the social sciences; and three other institutions that later became the Imperial College of Science and Technology
- University of Louisville
- large public university located in Louisville (Kentucky, USA)
- University of Maine
- public university system with 7 campuses throughout the state of Maine (USA)
- University of Manchester
- Public university in Manchester, England. It has its origins in a nonsectarian college for men founded in 1851. It became a university in 1880, having established colleges in Leeds and Liverpool which later (1903) became universities in their own right. Ernest Rutherford conducted important research on atomic physics at Manchester, and one of the first modern computers was built there in the late 1940s. The university grants undergraduate and advanced academic and professional degrees in a broad range of subjects
- University of Manitoba
- Canadian public university in Winnipeg, founded in 1877. It has faculties of agricultural and food sciences, architecture, arts and sciences, education, engineering, law, graduate studies, management, medicine, human ecology, and social work, among other fields. Campus facilities include centres for the study of aging, defense and security, and diabetes
- University of Maryland
- large public university system with several campuses throughout the state of Maryland (USA)
- University of Massachusetts
- UMass, large public university system with its main campus in Amherst and 4 satellite campuses throughout the state of Massachusetts (USA)
- University of Melbourne
- Public university in Melbourne, Austl. Founded as a liberal arts college in 1853, in subsequent decades it added schools or faculties of agriculture, architecture, commerce, dentistry, education, engineering, law, medicine, music, and veterinary medicine. It continued to expand during the 20th century, adding programs in nuclear science, applied economic research, and South and Southeast Asian studies
- University of Memphis
- pubic university located in Memphis (Tennessee, USA)
- University of Michigan
- large public university in Michigan with three campuses (in Ann Arbor, Dearborn, and Flint)
- University of Michigan
- U.S. state university with its main campus in Ann Arbor and branch campuses in Flint and Dearborn. It originated as a preparatory school in Detroit in 1817 and moved to Ann Arbor in 1837. Today it is one of the nation's leading research universities, consisting of a college of literature, science, and the arts and numerous graduate and professional schools. Special facilities include a nuclear reactor, a hospital complex, an aerospace engineering laboratory, a Great Lakes research centre, and the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library
- University of Minnesota
- large public university system with 5 campuses throughout the state of Minnesota (USA)
- University of Mississippi
- large public university with its main campus in Oxford and three satellite campuses throughout the state of Mississippi (USA)
- University of Missouri
- public university system that operates four campuses throughout the state of Missouri (USA)
- University of Montana
- large public university located in Missoula (Montana, USA)
- University of Montreal
- Canadian public French-language university founded in Montreal, Quebec, in 1878. It provides instruction in the arts and sciences, education, law, medicine, theology, architecture, social work, criminology, and other fields. Affiliated schools include a polytechnic school and a school of advanced business studies
- University of Munich
- German in full Ludwig-Maximilians Universität München Autonomous university supported by the state of Bavaria, Germany. It was founded in Ingolstadt in 1472 and modeled after the University of Vienna. During the Protestant Reformation it was a centre of Roman Catholic opposition to Martin Luther. In 1799 schools of economics and political science were added, and in 1826 it moved to Munich, where agricultural and technical programs were founded
- University of Nebraska
- large public university with its main campus in Lincoln and 3 satellite campuses throughout the state of Nebraska (USA)
- University of Nevada
- large public university in Nevada with campuses in Reno and Las Vegas (USA)
- University of Nevada at Las Vegas
- UNLV, large public university located in Las Vegas (Nevada, USA)
- University of New Brunswick
- Canadian public university in Fredericton, founded in 1785. It has faculties of administration, arts, computer science, education, engineering, forestry, graduate studies, law, nursing, physical education, science, and business and additional programs in business, languages, and social sciences. A branch campus is located in Saint John
- University of New Hampshire
- large public university with its main campus in Durham and several satellite campuses throughout the state of New Hampshire (USA)
- University of New Mexico
- large public university with its main campus in Albuquerque and 4 satellite campuses throughout the state of New Mexico (USA)
- University of North Carolina
- UNC, large public university with its main campus in Chapel Hill and several smaller campuses throughout the state of North Carolina (USA)
- University of Notre Dame
- Notre Dame a private Catholic university in Indiana, US, which is famous especially for having a very good football team. Private university in Notre Dame, near South Bend, Indiana, U.S. It was founded in 1842 and reorganized in the 1920s; it became coeducational in 1972. It is affiliated with the Roman Catholic church. It has colleges of arts and letters, science, engineering, and business administration. It also has a graduate school and a law school
- University of Oxford
- Autonomous university at Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. It was founded in the 12th century and modeled on the University of Paris, with initial faculties of theology, law, medicine, and the liberal arts. Of the earliest colleges, University College was founded in 1249, Balliol 1263, and Merton in 1264. Early scholars of note include Roger Bacon, John Duns Scotus, William of Ockham, and John Wycliffe. In the Renaissance, Desiderius Erasmus and St. Thomas More helped enhance its already considerable reputation. By then faculties of physical science, political science, and other fields had been added. The first women's college, Lady Margaret Hall, was established in 1878. There are 32 other colleges and collegial institutions. Oxford houses the Bodleian Library and the Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology. Oxford University Press (1478) is the world's oldest, largest, and most famous university publisher. Oxford has been associated with many of the greatest names in British history
- University of Paris
- Second oldest European university (after the University of Bologna), founded 1170 in France. It grew out of the cathedral schools of Notre-Dame and, with papal support, soon became a great centre of Christian orthodox teaching. In the medieval period its professors included St. Bonaventure, Albertus Magnus, and Thomas Aquinas. Its most celebrated early college was the Sorbonne, founded 1257. The university declined somewhat under the impact of the Reformation and Counter-Reformation. With the French Revolution and Napoleon's reforms, teaching became more independent of religion and politics. By the mid-20th century the university had again become a preeminent scientific and intellectual centre. In May 1968 a Sorbonne student protest grew into a serious national crisis. This led to decentralizing reforms, the old university being replaced in 1970 by a system in Paris and its suburbs called the Universities of Paris I-XIII
- University of Pennsylvania
- U.S. private university in Philadelphia, a traditional member of the Ivy League. Founded in 1740 as a charity school, it became an academy in 1753, with Benjamin Franklin as president of the first board of trustees. With the founding of the first medical school in North America (1765), it became a university. Today, in addition to its college of arts and sciences and its medical school, it includes a college of general studies and schools of business (the Wharton School), communication (the Annenberg School), education, engineering, fine arts, law, nursing, dentistry, veterinary medicine, and social work. Its institutes include the Wistar Institute of Anatomy and Biology and the Phipps Institute of Genetics and Community Diseases. The University Museum (of archaeology and ethnology) is a teaching and research organization
- University of Saint Andrews
- Oldest university in Scotland, founded in 1411 on the outskirts of St. Andrews. The university buildings include St. Salvator's College (1450), St. Leonard's College (1512; merged with St. Salvator's in 1747), and the University Library (1612). A third college, St. Mary's (1537), has always taught theology
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