business college - translation to arabic
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business college - translation to arabic

Business College; Business colleges; Business university

business college         
مدرسة تجارية
مدرسة تجارية      

business college

Membership card         
  • Oscar Friedheim]] card cutting and scoring machine from 1889, capable of producing up to 100,000 visiting and business cards a day
  • [[Eugène Chigot]], post impressionist painter, business card 1890s
  • 200px
  • A business card from [[Richard Nixon]]'s first Congressional campaign, in 1946.
CARD BEARING BUSINESS INFORMATION ABOUT A COMPANY OR INDIVIDUAL
Business cards; Meishi; Business card printing; Business Card; Membership card; Name card; Business Cards; Japanese business card; Businesscard
بطاقة عضوية

Definition

business card
(business cards)
A person's business card or their card is a small card which they give to other people, and which has their name and details of their job and company printed on it.
N-COUNT: oft poss N

Wikipedia

Business college

A business college is a school that provides education above the high school level but could not be compared to that of a traditional university or college. Unlike universities and even junior and community colleges, business colleges typically train the student for a specific vocational aspect, usually clerical tasks such as typing, stenography or simple bookkeeping. Proprietary schools can be traced back as far as 1636 to the puritans of Massachusetts. They served as a trade school for both business and necessary skills, from shipbuilding to sewing.

The first business college founded in the United States is said to have been Nelson Business College in Cincinnati, founded by Richard Nelson in 1856. The goal of a business college is not to provide a thorough education, as is the model of modern universities in the liberal arts fields, but rather to provide training for a very specific task, such as legal terms, marketing, strategy, planning, Human resources, management information systems, finance, or negotiation. Academic credits earned at a business college do not transfer to other colleges or universities and students cannot earn a bachelor's degree, though an associate degree may be offered. Business College's do offer degrees in business administration and management. These are typically offered through a 1-2 year program.

In recent decades the number of these institutions has been declining as business colleges have been finding more competition coming from community colleges, which provide both vocational as well as liberal arts classes and are often able to offer the classes at a lower rate of tuition, as they are usually nonprofit and subsidized by one or more levels of government assistance. Business colleges should not be confused with business schools which typically offer a Master of Business Administration (MBA) program after a student has completed a bachelor's degree. MBA programs typically take two academic years to complete.

In the US, business colleges are sometimes also called proprietary colleges, especially when they grant associate degrees or higher.

Examples of use of business college
1. Davis was born in Rowan County, N.C., and attended Hampton Roads Business College.
2. The students at the business college were returning to midterm exams after the Iraqi weekend.
3. She attended Hampton Roads Business College; she got her real estate license in 1'84 and her real estate broker‘s license four years later.
4. "She was too shaky and didn‘t have a feeling for horses, whereas Joy loved them." After leaving school Joy went to business college.
5. Awatif Al–Miqbil, an academic at King Saud Universitys Business College in Riyadh, urged Saudi businesswomen to diversify their investment to other lines of businesses instead of concentrating on beauty salons.