(junior) high school is called 'le collège' (masc.) in French. The student there is called 'un collégien / une collégienne'.
(senior) high school is called 'le lycée' (masc.); the student is called 'un lycéen / une lycéenne'
lycée
Answerécole - schoolCollege - middle schoolLycée - high schoolécole
it is just postal same spelling i take french in high school im a sixth year
The French word for middle school is "collège."
"High school" is an English equivalent of the French word lycée.Specifically, the word is a masculine noun in its singular form. It also may be translated as "secondary school" in the United States of America. The pronunciation wil be "lee-say" in French.
In French, haut école or l'école is high school; le lycée is college, or senior high school.
In French, you say "lycéen" for a male high school student and "lycéenne" for a female high school student.
école - school
'bac' is the abbreviation of Baccalaureat, the exam taken by French students doing their final grade in high school.
school binder = cartable (french Canadian) or classeur (french European) *classeur = filing cabinet in French Canadian *cartable = a kind of school bag in French European
junior high school is called 'le collège' in French. Senior high school is called 'le lycée'
Yes, the noun 'French' can function as an antecedent.The antecedent of a pronoun can be a noun or a pronoun.The word 'French' is both an adjective and a noun.The noun 'French' is a word for the language of France or the people of France as a group.Examples:The French are justly proud of their wine industry.I learned French in high school. It has been helpful when I travel.