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Natalia09 Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Certificate of

Can I use this expression "Certificate of an officially recognised emergency medical technician". Is the article correct?

Thank you.
  

Top answer

No, it's not. You could say that something was certified by a licensed practitioner. Certificates are documents issued by a government or other issuing body.

  • No, it's not.
  • You could say that something was certified by a licensed practitioner.
  • Certificates are documents issued by a government or other issuing body.
  • Common certificates are: Certificate of deposit (a financial instrument that pays interest, issued by a bank) Certificate of live birth (birth certificate) Certificate of Occupancy Certificate of Authority etc.
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3 Answers
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No, it's not.

You could say that something was certified by a licensed practitioner.

Certificates are documents issued by a government or other issuing body.

Common certificates are:

Certificate of deposit (a financial instrument that pays interest, issued by a bank)

Certificate of live birth (birth certificate)

Certificate of Occupancy
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The meaning should be "document proving that the person concerned is an emergency medical technician"
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Then say:

He is certified as an EMT.

He has EMTcertification.

The name of the document would depend on the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_medical_technician..

In the US, individual states give the certification and there are different levels, such as

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