voy a la escuela los martes (use any day of the week)
días laborables.
If I had more time, I would finish reading this book.
The question is asking: "What is your school called?" (literally: How does your school call itself?). So the response would be: "My school is called X." In Spanish this is: "Mi escuela se llama X."
To change a future interrogative sentence into a passive voice sentence, you would generally rearrange the sentence structure so that the object of the active sentence becomes the subject of the passive sentence. For example, "Will they finish the project?" could be changed to "Will the project be finished by them?"
The pronoun 'that' in the sentence, "That is why." refers to the sentence(s) or explanation preceding it, which would be a response to a question starting with 'why'.
Yes, starting a sentence with "but" is acceptable in informal writing for added emphasis or to contrast with the previous idea. However, in formal writing, it is generally best to avoid starting sentences with coordinating conjunctions like "but."
Did you manage to finish your sentence?The correct usage would be "did you manage to finish?"
Lions. A pride of lions.
An enamel finish is more durable than a lacquer finish.
A sentence starting with had would be a question: Had you seen her before that?
i was the first one to the finish line but i floundered when they said my name.
I need to generate enough energy to finish my homework.
Satin or a matte finish would look good in this area.
I would say "Despues asisto la escuela, iré a casa. "
The question is asking What is the name of your school. To answer, you would say: Mi escuela se llama (insert name).
This is really just a sentence fragment, and really requires context to answer fully. "This is something that I wear to school" would be "Esto es algo que llevo a la escuela".
To be wan is to be faint or pale. An example sentence would be: She was so wan, it was starting to worry people.
A period would go inside parentheses to finish a complete sentence, but you always need sentence-ending punctuation outside of the parentheses.