El gimnasio está arriba.
Gimnasio
arriba hay.... = upstairs there is.... (pronolunced 'AhRREEbah I....') More specifically en el/un piso de arriba....= (in/on the/an) upstairs (floor) there is....
gymnase
gymnasio It's gimnasio...Spanish doesn't use "y" as a vowel between two consonants in a word.
She went to a gigantic gymnasium. Since gigantic doesn't start with a vowel, the article before it is 'a' not 'an.'
Todas las cosas en un gimnasio.
You can say either, depending on what you mean. Usually you are asking someone to perform a sequence of actions: first, to come upstairs, and second, to see something. The way to say this is "Come upstairs and see it." But if you are saying that the purpose of coming upstairs is in order to see something, in response perhaps to the question "Why should I come upstairs?" or "Where can I see it?" then "Come upstairs to see it" is correct.
gymnasium's
Gymnasium
Tualet naverchu
A gymnasium is to do gymnastics and be safe doing it
1. sunshine shores cave 2.Gymnasium 3.pasitivly green centre(inside) 4. Market Place 5.Bearville outfitters (upstairs)