i think both yes and no
no
The professional way is to say that you have earned your Juris Doctorate degree. It is not wrong to say that you earned your JD degree.
I do believe that only 5. I don't know the names but I think only 5
Are you asking, or stating this assertion? Assertions are better used in declarative statements. Do most Americans realize that the main reason you asked this question was to assert that organized crime, gambling and politics is why professional athletes are so well paid? See how that sentence doesn't really work? I suspect, most Americans who pay the arm and a leg for season tickets believe it is there hard earned money that is paying these athletes. Perhaps, those advertisers who throw billions of dollars towards advertising in professional sports believe they have something to do with why professional athletes get paid so well. It is relatively certain that those people who own professional sports team believe they are the reason professional athletes get paid so well.
R. S. Poore stated that one of the factors designating a person as a professional is an earned credential. Such an earned certification, licensure, or designation
Boxing Floyd Mayweather earned 25 million for a fight.
The AA is not a professional degree. The professional degree are such as lawyer, medical doctor, etc..
I/We/You/They have earnedHe/She/It has earned
Earned the money they needed to live on by fighting.
varsity letters earned *APEX*
Les athletes that compete in the olympics means less medals earned for the country or continent.