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Anonymous Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

Bachelor's degree

I'm trying to translate a person's academic history.

It says
BA Com. LLB (Bachelor of Trade and Law)

I know that the BA is Bachelor of Arts.
What is Com. LLB?

Thank you in advance.
  

Top answer

It's "BA Com" or BA Comm', which is a bachelor's degree in either communications or commerce.

  • It's "BA Com" or BA Comm', which is a bachelor's degree in either communications or commerce.
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5 Answers
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It's "BA Com" or BA Comm', which is a bachelor's degree in either communications or commerce.
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Thank you very much, Mr. Micawber.

>It's "BA Com" or BA Comm', which is a bachelor's degree in either communications or commerce.

So does it mean this person has bachelor's degrees in both communication or commerce and trade and law?
Does LLB mean trade and law?
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He has a BA in either communications or commerce; I don't know which one, of course.
LLB is a degree from law school; I guess that 'trade and law' was his specialization for that degree.
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Thank you for your reply.

So maybe the person has two degrees (Commerce = Trade, and LLB = Law).

Thanks again!
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AnonymousSo maybe the person has two degrees (Commerce = Trade, and LLB = Law).
Yes, that is a good guess (better than mine, actually).

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