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Phi Beta Kappa
[ fahy bey-tuh kap-uh, bee-tuh ]
noun
- a national honor society, founded in 1776, whose members are chosen, for lifetime membership, usually from among college undergraduates of high academic distinction.
- a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
Phi Beta Kappa
/ ˈfaɪ ˈbeɪtə ˈkæpə; ˈbiːtə /
noun
- a national honorary society, founded in 1776, membership of which is based on high academic ability
- a member of this society
Word History and Origins
Origin of Phi Beta Kappa1
Example Sentences
The film, in its first minutes, prefers the latter, opening with a rat-a-tat montage of her many successes: author, linguist, Phi Beta Kappa scholar.
He grew up here, was valedictorian at Jefferson High School and a Phi Beta Kappa political science student at UCLA.
At Columbia University, he breezed through literature studies and earned a bachelor’s degree, with a Phi Beta Kappa key, in 1952.
A member of the Phi Beta Kappa honor society, she graduated from New York University in 1985 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism before deciding on a law career.
She became a Swiss citizen at age 14 and was a Phi Beta Kappa when she graduated from Stanford with a degree in political science.
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