"enfin, demain nous allons à l'école"
In French you say: "pas d'ecole demain" (no school tomorrow) or "je n'ai pas d'ecole demain" meaning I have no school tomorrow. In Spanish you can say: "no voy a la escuela manana" meaning i am not going to school tomorrow.
The school should have a school website. If not, you can call the school. I would say yes because tomorrow isn't a holiday. Take the chances and just drive pass by the school tomorrow morning with your school things in chase. If you walk you can also walk pass by. You might seem embarrassed so act like your just going to summer school. Something like that. But, mostly I would say call the school and ask. Thank you, hopefully this answer helps.=D,C&P
the present tences is what about you do now and the future is what about what you do tomorrow example..... i will go to school tomorrow
Something nobody else is going to be. Do something that you like, and that you're interested in, and that other people will say "Woah!, i should have done that"
No the calender doesn't say but I called the school and they do not have school tomorrow.
To say 'I am going to school' in Spanish, you would say 'Voy a la escuela.'
To say 'I am going to school' in Spanish, you would say 'Voy a la escuela.'
Hair today gone tomorrow
Yes. "Hasta manyana" literally means "until tomorrow", so it is the exact equivalent of "See you tomorrow", which makes sense to say if you plan to see this person tomorrow.However, any parting remark is really interchangeable. For example, in English, you could say "See you tomorrow" even if you are not going to see that person tomorrow or you could say "See you later" even if you are not going to see that person later in the day.
prep don't have nap time and don't have school work like other grades..
It is foreshadowing that Mercutio is going to tomorrow. Grave is being used as a pun.
He and i am going to school