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It depends on how you use it. If a class's official title is "Bilingual Third Grade", yes, capitalize. But I suspect it is not an official title, but instead a description. Therefore small case is best.I attended a bilingual third grade class before entering an English-only class in fourth grade.
No; it was in the German language. The first kindergarten in the United States seems to have been one in Watertown, Wisconsin, in 1856. It was conducted in German because the founder of the "kindergarten movement," Friedrich Froebel, was from Germany and the first women he trained to teach kindergarten also spoke German (including Margarethe Meyer-Shurz, a German woman who came to America and began the kindergarten class in Wisconsin). The first English-language kindergarten was operated in Boston, beginning in 1860, by Elizabeth Peabody.
It is capitalized at the beginning of the sentence or when it forms part of the proper noun. Examples: Cinderella Pre-kindergarten School Pink Ballerina Pre-kindergarten Center
The noun form of the adjective bilingual is bilingualism.
Bilingual means you can speak two languages so you become bilingual by learning another language.
Yes, "bilingual" is synonymous with "bilinguistic" or "two-language."
"Bilingual" is spelled b-i-l-i-n-g-u-a-l.
The Bilingual Review was created in 1974.
Someone who is bilingual knows two languages.
The word "bilingual" is an adjective.
Bilingual means that a person can speak more than one language. This is an example sentence using the word bilingual. Jill was bilingual because she could speak English and Spanish.
She is bilingual, speaking both English and Spanish fluently.