Is the phrase 'accreditation award ceremony' grammatically correct?
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty{ margin-bottom:0;
}
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I'm looking for a phrase that describes 'certificate giving ceremony'. 'Accreditation' seemed like good word but upon further searching I saw the phrase 'accreditation award ceremony'.
-The word 'accreditation' means to give/recognize someone's abilities (presumably by handing them a diploma/certificate/medal/crest etc?).
-Noun
-The giving of credentials.
-The act of accrediting.
-letters of accreditation.
--(education) The granting of approval to an institution of higher learning by an official review board after the school has met certain requirements.
-[Cited from Wikitonary]
--●So doesn't the phrase 'accreditation award ceremony' invoke pleonasm or even tautology?
--●Are there any better phrases or word(s) that can surrogate for 'award giving ceremony'?
--●Feel free to rectify any errors but please apprise me of it in the comments so I may learn.
meaning phrase-requests nouns
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I'm looking for a phrase that describes 'certificate giving ceremony'. 'Accreditation' seemed like good word but upon further searching I saw the phrase 'accreditation award ceremony'.
-The word 'accreditation' means to give/recognize someone's abilities (presumably by handing them a diploma/certificate/medal/crest etc?).
-Noun
-The giving of credentials.
-The act of accrediting.
-letters of accreditation.
--(education) The granting of approval to an institution of higher learning by an official review board after the school has met certain requirements.
-[Cited from Wikitonary]
--●So doesn't the phrase 'accreditation award ceremony' invoke pleonasm or even tautology?
--●Are there any better phrases or word(s) that can surrogate for 'award giving ceremony'?
--●Feel free to rectify any errors but please apprise me of it in the comments so I may learn.
meaning phrase-requests nouns
Accreditation is not just a certificate. Not everyone can "give accreditation" away. Use Certificate instead.
– Kris
16 hours ago
@kris what exactly is 'accreditation' then ?
– Specter
8 hours ago
1
There's nothing wrong with the grammar, but there may be a problem with the vocabulary. An educational institution is accredited when it has been approved as competent to award qualifications. A successful student gets their certificate at an 'award ceremony'. I suppose an 'accreditation award ceremony' could have been held to mark the institution's having become accredited.
– Kate Bunting
5 hours ago
@kate Bunting ac·cred·i·ta·tion -/əˌkrediˈtāSH(ə)n/Submit -noun -noun: accreditation; plural noun: accreditations 1. -the action or process of officially recognizing someone as havinɡ a particular status or beinɡ qualified to perform a particular activity. "the accreditation of professionals" 2. -an acknowledgment of a person's responsibility for or achievement of something. "both parties create authorship, and to make this clear I have always used joint accreditations" -cited from Online Oxford dictionary.
– Specter
5 hours ago
^ From the definition above and the one from Wikitonary it states that 'the act of giving credentials' so couldn't it be referring to giving 'privilege/status' to an individual ?
– Specter
5 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I'm looking for a phrase that describes 'certificate giving ceremony'. 'Accreditation' seemed like good word but upon further searching I saw the phrase 'accreditation award ceremony'.
-The word 'accreditation' means to give/recognize someone's abilities (presumably by handing them a diploma/certificate/medal/crest etc?).
-Noun
-The giving of credentials.
-The act of accrediting.
-letters of accreditation.
--(education) The granting of approval to an institution of higher learning by an official review board after the school has met certain requirements.
-[Cited from Wikitonary]
--●So doesn't the phrase 'accreditation award ceremony' invoke pleonasm or even tautology?
--●Are there any better phrases or word(s) that can surrogate for 'award giving ceremony'?
--●Feel free to rectify any errors but please apprise me of it in the comments so I may learn.
meaning phrase-requests nouns
I'm looking for a phrase that describes 'certificate giving ceremony'. 'Accreditation' seemed like good word but upon further searching I saw the phrase 'accreditation award ceremony'.
-The word 'accreditation' means to give/recognize someone's abilities (presumably by handing them a diploma/certificate/medal/crest etc?).
-Noun
-The giving of credentials.
-The act of accrediting.
-letters of accreditation.
--(education) The granting of approval to an institution of higher learning by an official review board after the school has met certain requirements.
-[Cited from Wikitonary]
--●So doesn't the phrase 'accreditation award ceremony' invoke pleonasm or even tautology?
--●Are there any better phrases or word(s) that can surrogate for 'award giving ceremony'?
--●Feel free to rectify any errors but please apprise me of it in the comments so I may learn.
meaning phrase-requests nouns
meaning phrase-requests nouns
asked 17 hours ago
Specter
987
987
Accreditation is not just a certificate. Not everyone can "give accreditation" away. Use Certificate instead.
– Kris
16 hours ago
@kris what exactly is 'accreditation' then ?
– Specter
8 hours ago
1
There's nothing wrong with the grammar, but there may be a problem with the vocabulary. An educational institution is accredited when it has been approved as competent to award qualifications. A successful student gets their certificate at an 'award ceremony'. I suppose an 'accreditation award ceremony' could have been held to mark the institution's having become accredited.
– Kate Bunting
5 hours ago
@kate Bunting ac·cred·i·ta·tion -/əˌkrediˈtāSH(ə)n/Submit -noun -noun: accreditation; plural noun: accreditations 1. -the action or process of officially recognizing someone as havinɡ a particular status or beinɡ qualified to perform a particular activity. "the accreditation of professionals" 2. -an acknowledgment of a person's responsibility for or achievement of something. "both parties create authorship, and to make this clear I have always used joint accreditations" -cited from Online Oxford dictionary.
– Specter
5 hours ago
^ From the definition above and the one from Wikitonary it states that 'the act of giving credentials' so couldn't it be referring to giving 'privilege/status' to an individual ?
– Specter
5 hours ago
add a comment |
Accreditation is not just a certificate. Not everyone can "give accreditation" away. Use Certificate instead.
– Kris
16 hours ago
@kris what exactly is 'accreditation' then ?
– Specter
8 hours ago
1
There's nothing wrong with the grammar, but there may be a problem with the vocabulary. An educational institution is accredited when it has been approved as competent to award qualifications. A successful student gets their certificate at an 'award ceremony'. I suppose an 'accreditation award ceremony' could have been held to mark the institution's having become accredited.
– Kate Bunting
5 hours ago
@kate Bunting ac·cred·i·ta·tion -/əˌkrediˈtāSH(ə)n/Submit -noun -noun: accreditation; plural noun: accreditations 1. -the action or process of officially recognizing someone as havinɡ a particular status or beinɡ qualified to perform a particular activity. "the accreditation of professionals" 2. -an acknowledgment of a person's responsibility for or achievement of something. "both parties create authorship, and to make this clear I have always used joint accreditations" -cited from Online Oxford dictionary.
– Specter
5 hours ago
^ From the definition above and the one from Wikitonary it states that 'the act of giving credentials' so couldn't it be referring to giving 'privilege/status' to an individual ?
– Specter
5 hours ago
Accreditation is not just a certificate. Not everyone can "give accreditation" away. Use Certificate instead.
– Kris
16 hours ago
Accreditation is not just a certificate. Not everyone can "give accreditation" away. Use Certificate instead.
– Kris
16 hours ago
@kris what exactly is 'accreditation' then ?
– Specter
8 hours ago
@kris what exactly is 'accreditation' then ?
– Specter
8 hours ago
1
1
There's nothing wrong with the grammar, but there may be a problem with the vocabulary. An educational institution is accredited when it has been approved as competent to award qualifications. A successful student gets their certificate at an 'award ceremony'. I suppose an 'accreditation award ceremony' could have been held to mark the institution's having become accredited.
– Kate Bunting
5 hours ago
There's nothing wrong with the grammar, but there may be a problem with the vocabulary. An educational institution is accredited when it has been approved as competent to award qualifications. A successful student gets their certificate at an 'award ceremony'. I suppose an 'accreditation award ceremony' could have been held to mark the institution's having become accredited.
– Kate Bunting
5 hours ago
@kate Bunting ac·cred·i·ta·tion -/əˌkrediˈtāSH(ə)n/Submit -noun -noun: accreditation; plural noun: accreditations 1. -the action or process of officially recognizing someone as havinɡ a particular status or beinɡ qualified to perform a particular activity. "the accreditation of professionals" 2. -an acknowledgment of a person's responsibility for or achievement of something. "both parties create authorship, and to make this clear I have always used joint accreditations" -cited from Online Oxford dictionary.
– Specter
5 hours ago
@kate Bunting ac·cred·i·ta·tion -/əˌkrediˈtāSH(ə)n/Submit -noun -noun: accreditation; plural noun: accreditations 1. -the action or process of officially recognizing someone as havinɡ a particular status or beinɡ qualified to perform a particular activity. "the accreditation of professionals" 2. -an acknowledgment of a person's responsibility for or achievement of something. "both parties create authorship, and to make this clear I have always used joint accreditations" -cited from Online Oxford dictionary.
– Specter
5 hours ago
^ From the definition above and the one from Wikitonary it states that 'the act of giving credentials' so couldn't it be referring to giving 'privilege/status' to an individual ?
– Specter
5 hours ago
^ From the definition above and the one from Wikitonary it states that 'the act of giving credentials' so couldn't it be referring to giving 'privilege/status' to an individual ?
– Specter
5 hours ago
add a comment |
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fenglish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f474404%2fis-the-phrase-accreditation-award-ceremony-grammatically-correct%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Accreditation is not just a certificate. Not everyone can "give accreditation" away. Use Certificate instead.
– Kris
16 hours ago
@kris what exactly is 'accreditation' then ?
– Specter
8 hours ago
1
There's nothing wrong with the grammar, but there may be a problem with the vocabulary. An educational institution is accredited when it has been approved as competent to award qualifications. A successful student gets their certificate at an 'award ceremony'. I suppose an 'accreditation award ceremony' could have been held to mark the institution's having become accredited.
– Kate Bunting
5 hours ago
@kate Bunting ac·cred·i·ta·tion -/əˌkrediˈtāSH(ə)n/Submit -noun -noun: accreditation; plural noun: accreditations 1. -the action or process of officially recognizing someone as havinɡ a particular status or beinɡ qualified to perform a particular activity. "the accreditation of professionals" 2. -an acknowledgment of a person's responsibility for or achievement of something. "both parties create authorship, and to make this clear I have always used joint accreditations" -cited from Online Oxford dictionary.
– Specter
5 hours ago
^ From the definition above and the one from Wikitonary it states that 'the act of giving credentials' so couldn't it be referring to giving 'privilege/status' to an individual ?
– Specter
5 hours ago