"School's being held" is an English equivalent of "Hay escuela," and "Is school being held?" is an English equivalent of "¿Hay escuela?"
Specifically, the verb "hay" means "There is, There are." The feminine noun "escuela" means "school." The pronunciation is "eye* eh-SKWEH-lah."
*The sound "eye" is similar to that in the English noun "eye."
No hay ninguna escuela Ninguna escuela hay No hay escuela alguna No hay clases
"Que hay en tu escuela" in English means "What is in your school?"
Hay matones en la escuela.
Escuela in Spanish, school in English.
The word School in English translates to escuela in Spanish.
"No school" is an English equivalent of "no escuela."The adverb "no" means "no." The feminine noun "escuela" means "school." The pronunciation is "noh eh-SKWEH-lah."
"hay" translates to "there is" or "there are" in English.
"Ir a la escuela" in Spanish means "to go to school" in English.
"una misma escuela" = "one same school" or "a same school"
la escuela es diversión
The term Como estaba la escuela translated from Spanish to English is as was the school. Spanish is a Romance language that originated in Castile, a region of Spain.
"Your school" is an English equivalent of "tuescuela."Specifically, the feminine/masculine possessive adjective "tu" means "your." The feminine noun "escuela" means "school." The pronunciation is "too eh-SKWEH-lah."