The school was closed on Friday, December 18.
It's, "Tienes escuela el viernes."
on a Friday so if they say no u have time to get over it(the weekend)...if u go to school
No. It would be better to say: every week on Friday the Friday of every week the week beginning every Friday
No, this needs to be worded differently. Since Friday before Monday of the following week is the same as Friday of this week, one could say, "Send in your reports this Friday" or "Send in your reports Friday of this week." If the intent is to mean Friday of next week, and not the current week, one could say, "Send in your reports Friday of next week. Using a date as well as the day of the week would make it clearest: "Send in your reports Friday, December 17." It is interesting to note that even native speakers of English are often confused about what "this Friday" or "next Friday" mean, so it is best to supply enough information that the intended Friday is absolutely clear.
Sure. Ever heard of Sunday school? Let's say that during the school year, there were a lot of snow days. Days when the school was closed due to snow. It might be necessary to have school on the weekend to make up for those days when school was closed due to bad weather. Sunday school is 4 church bud
To say "Happy Friday" in Hawaiian, you would say "Hauʻoli Pōʻakahi," which translates to "Happy Friday."
this Friday is : 'ce vendredi' in French.
You do not say "Happy Good Friday" in greek.... you actually say "Good Resurrection" which is "Kali Anastasi"
You can't say Happy Friday in Hebrew, but a common greeting on Friday afternoons is Shabbat Shalom (שבת שלום).
Yes, it is correct to say "Friday's 3-5pm is fine for me" to communicate that the suggested time on Friday works for you.
I go to East witter middle school and i say its me and my friend heard nose like children and at that school they used to have a pool and a boy died and they closed the pool.
bien=good viernes=friday