I graduated from Harvard Summa Cum Laude.
no
Summa Theologiae
Use lower case and italicize cum laude, magna cum laude and summa cum.
The Latin term cum laude means with praise. In academic circles it has taken on the meaning of with honors. Each academic institution sets its own rules on where to draw the line. Perhaps they have set the bar to mean the top five percent of a graduating class should be so honored. They might also grant an even higher accolade called magna cum laude use to indicate with great honors. Rarely offered and in the best academic tradition rarely presented is the term summa cum laude or with highest honors. When someone says they graduated with this appellation, stand tall because you are in the presence of a genius of the first order. You may be dealing with a fraud or the graduate of a diploma mill. You might want to ask them about Phi Beta Kappa or Mensa or Oxford.
The double-entry principle of accounting is attributed to the Italian mathematician and Franciscan friar Luca Pacioli, who published it in his 1494 work, "Summa de Arithmetica, Geometria, Proportioni et Proportionalita."
Liabilities don't come in the left hand side. We traditionally put liabilities "credits" on the right and "debits" on the left. This dates back to Pacioli's "Summa de Arithmetica, Geometria, Proportioni et Proportionalita" where he outlines double entry (debit and credit) accounting.
Summa cum laude is a separate honour to PhD; generally meaning the reciepient had the top marks in his graduating class.
summa
as babylonian summa = if
What does "Summa Theologica" mean?
Summa Corporation was created in 1972.
Summa Technologiae was created in 1964.
Nicole Summa is 5' 1".
summa cumlaude
The correct term is: cum laude, meaning "with distinction"; magna cum laude, meaning "with great distinction"; or summa cum laude, "with highest distinction".
Homer Summa was born on 1898-11-03.