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actually, it is just the other way round: it is more appropriate to use full time equivalents for Swedish universities, because the Swedish universities' way to count their students differs from the way other countries do it. Stockholm University does not have more than 50,000 students, instead they have 50,000 people who took one or more courses in the two terms within one year, which means that if student 1 only takes a course in the first term but his place is taken by student 2 in the second term than that is two students according to the Swedish way of counting, although it is the same place. There are a number of other weird ways of counting, which make the figure 50,000 basically useless and incomparable to the numbers of universities in other countries. --Axt (talk) 20:26, 10 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

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