right use of ''engaged'' in this context

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merry 07

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Hi,

Not sure if the following is correct in use of ''engaged'' when I tried to mean ''the school I attended''.


- While preparing for a new school to further my study even after graduation from the school i engaged.

would any of you let me know if the underlined part is correct in grammar?

Thank you.
 
No, it sounds incomplete. Engage takes an indirect object, so it doesn't apply to the school.
 
While preparing for a new school to further my study(plural, studies) even after graduation from the school I engaged (studied in),

You can say you are engaged(employed) by a school to do some work, but not for studies. In which case, the school engages you, not the other way round.

not a student
 
Most of all, I want to show my appreciation of all your comments.

Well, An english dictionary says the followig belongs to what ''engage'' means.

-To involve oneself or become occupied; participate


If I try to mean the above when i used ''engaged'' in the sentence, then still is it completely wrong? or forcibly admittable?

thanks.
 
Most of all, I want to show my appreciation of all your comments.

Well, An english dictionary says the followig belongs to what ''engage'' means.

-To involve oneself or become occupied; participate


If I try to mean the above when i used ''engaged'' in the sentence, then still is it completely wrong? or forcibly admittable?

thanks.

Not even forcibly admittable.
You engage the school literally means you employ the school!:)
 
Can anyone whose mother tongue is english give me comments for this issue?


what about this in terms of grammar when i try to mean '' the school I was concerned with''?

- after graduation from the school I was engaged.


thanks
 
Can anyone whose mother tongue is english give me comments for this issue?


what about this in terms of grammar when i try to mean '' the school I was concerned with''?

- after graduation from the school I was engaged.


thanks
You've had a few opinions from native speakers.
Here's another: it's wrong.

In any case, even if your dictionary is correct, you can't say: " ... after graduation from the school I was participated.
 
after graduation from the school I was engaged

It's correct if you mean you're engaged to be married.
 
No, then you'd need "the school where I was engaged [to / with X].
 
ok thanks.

Then, what about this to mean ''attend''?

- after graduation from the school whose course I was engaged.
 
ok thanks.

Then, what about this to mean ''attend''?

- after graduation from the school whose course I was engaged.
It seems that you have an unshakable compulsion to use this word. So:
" ... after graduation from the school whose courses I had been engaged in completing ..."
" ... after graduation from the school with whose courses and teachers I had engaged so diligently, ..."
" ... after graduation from the school whose intellectual life I found to have engaged my deepest search for truth ..."
 
ok thanks.

Then, what about this to mean ''attend''?

- after graduation from the school whose course I was engaged.

It is not correct with any meaning at all; I don't see why you're so stuck to the idea. It's wrong.
 
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