From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishenrolen‧rol British English, enroll American English /ɪnˈrəʊl $ -ˈroʊl/ ●○○ verb (enrolled, enrolling) [intransitive, transitive] JOIN AN ORGANIZATIONto officially arrange to join a school, university, or course, or to arrange for someone else to do thisenrol on/for British English I decided to enrol for ‘Art for Beginners’.enrol in especially American English Californians are rushing to enroll in special aerobics classes.→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
enrol• Classes began soon after we enrolled.• Most students who enroll in geology courses do not intend to become geologists.• That year Sam enroled for law studies in Cape Town.• The first is that students are adults, and enrol and attend their courses voluntarily.• The course is very popular, so it's best to enrol as soon as possible.• She enrolled at a Colorado community college and discovered how inadequate her education had been when she tested at the remedial level.• In 1966 he enrolled at the University of London to study history.• Whereupon he would be enrolled forthwith in the Tenth Company, of tyro Marines.• His parents enrolled him in a military academy when he was only 8.• In 1996 he was enrolled in a community college in Arizona.• Bill enrolled in a four-year teacher-training course in Albany.• Today a record 62 percent of high school graduates are enrolled in colleges the following fall.• Two hundred and eighty women enrolled in the Argus club this year.• Anybody who has not yet been enrolled on the English course should contact the tutor.• I'd like to enrol on the German course, please.• Only twenty-seven new members had been enrolled since the Leeds Congress, and the total membership still stood at less than one hundred.• Those Victorian forces had apparently enrolled too many inadequate individuals, susceptible to the kaleidoscopic temptations of street life.enrol on/for• They need not necessarily be any more expensive than enrolling on a course.• In many areas, it is possible to enrol for adult education classes in archaeology.• In Britain, 15 percent of the 18-24-year-old population are enrolled on higher education courses.• However, candidates from overseas are not normally allowed to enrol for part-time study.• If you would like to enrol on the programme please see page viii for details.• You can work through the open learning material whether or not you are enrolled on the programme.• So I want you to enrol for the winter term at Auburn for one course.• In February 1991 Allitt applied to be enrolled for training as a sick children's nurse at Boston Pilgrim hospital.