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prettyautumn
How to say it in English?
If I want to pass a medical exam and become a doctor, which sentence is correct?
"I am studying hard in order to pass an exam and receive a license as a psychiatrist."
or "I am studying hard in order to pass an exam and receive a certificate as a psychiatrist."
Thank you!
Jan 27, 2025 10:32 PM
Answers · 9
2
Neither are very precise in the US.
I’m studying hard to become board-certified in Psychiatry. (You would already be a doctor but, in practice, would need to be board-certified to practice as a Psychiatrist for the long term)
Or
I’m studying hard for the board-certification exam in Psychiatry. (It’s obvious that you would need to pass it)
Other English-speaking countries would have terminology specific to their systems.
January 28, 2025
1
In British English, it would be more natural to say
"I'm studying hard in order to pass an exam and become a qualified psychiatrist"
January 28, 2025
1
The first sentence is more appropriate:
"I am studying hard in order to pass an exam and receive a license as a psychiatrist."
In English, the terms "license" and "certificate" have distinct meanings, especially in professional contexts:
- A license is an official document issued by a governing authority (like a medical board) that gives you legal permission to practice a profession (e.g., psychiatry, law, etc.). Without a license, you cannot legally work as a psychiatrist.
- A certificate is often a document that proves you completed a course or training. It doesn’t necessarily grant you the legal right to practice in a regulated profession.
Since psychiatry is a regulated profession, you need a license to legally work as a psychiatrist. That’s why the first sentence is correct!
January 28, 2025
1
I understand both, but I would say "become a licensed psychiatrist."
January 27, 2025
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prettyautumn
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English, French, Italian, Portuguese
Learning Language
English, French, Italian
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