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安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- nouns - high school, highschool, or high-school - English . . .
In English usage, should one use high-school, high school, or highschool? (Assume American English; I understand that the Brits call it secondary school )
- High-schooler vs. high schooler - English Language Usage Stack . . .
My initial attempt to settle the question with a google search didn't help as much as I'd hoped: A search for 'high schooler' revealed approximately 4% of results employing the hyphenated form A s
- in high school at high school | WordReference Forums
Wich would be the correct proposition at or in??? a) Where were you??? At In High school b) When I was In at high school IN Use 'in' with spaces: in a room in a building in a garden in a park Use 'at' with static (non-movement) verbs and places: at the cinema at work at homeAT Use
- highschool, high-school or high school - WordReference Forums
Which one is better: highschool, high-school or high school? Cheers, El Pollo
- In school vs at school - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
@mgb My take (also BE) on your final point is that "in school" would only be used as you describe, but "at school" could be used in either instance: "he's not gone to university yet - he's still at in school" and "he hasn't got home yet - he's still at school" all sound fine to me, but "he hasn't got home yet - he's still in school" would raise an eyebrow, since the implication is that the
- What to call Primary School + High School, but not College
The answers and comments to this question have already demonstrated that it varies across the country I would have answered that the terms "Primary School" and "Grade School" both refer to elementary, middle, and high school collectively
- meaning - Can “alma mater” refer to any school you’ve graduated from . . .
This is becoming a relatively common practice on Monday Night Football here in the U S They have a tradition of "introducing" each team's starters with a video snippet, where the player states his name and alma mater (e g , "Tony Romo, Eastern Illinois University")
- Im a teacher and I teach at in school OR at in a school
I believe you're trying to say where it is that you work and not what it is that you teach You have several options, but you'll need either a proper noun (e g , Jackson Middle School) or the countable noun "school" and an article
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