No. Schooling is the present participle, or gerund form, of the verb to school (to teach). It does not have a plural.
The plural form for the noun school is schools.
Yes, the noun school is a countable noun; the plural form is schools.
For example: "one school, two schools, many schools".
The plural form of school is schools
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The plural of headscarf is headscarves. As in "headscarves are not to be worn in school".
If you're referring to more than one head for a single school, the plural is 'heads of school'. If you're referring to one person head for more than one school, the plural is 'head of schools'. If you're referring to more than one person as head of more than one school, the plural is 'heads of schools'.
High Schools
An alumnus (plural alumni) is a graduate, or more specifically a male graduate, of a college, university, or school.
The plural form of the noun 'chalkboard' is chalkboards.Example: They've replaced all of the chalkboards at the high school.
The plural of a "girl's school" is "girls' school."
The plural form of the singular noun 'school' is schools.
The plural of "the school" in French is "les Γ©coles."
The plural possessive form of "school" is "schools'".
School offices.
The plural of headscarf is headscarves. As in "headscarves are not to be worn in school".
high schools from school to schools
If you're referring to more than one head for a single school, the plural is 'heads of school'. If you're referring to one person head for more than one school, the plural is 'head of schools'. If you're referring to more than one person as head of more than one school, the plural is 'heads of schools'.
The word school is singular, one school. The plural form is schools, two schools or many schools.
All of them are the same in both the singular and plural: "a carp" or "a school of carp," "a tuna" or "a school of tuna," "a perch" or "a school of perch," "a salmon" or "a school of salmon," and "a trout" or "a school of trout."
schools
my sisters schools