Greek for school is σχολείο [scholío]. The 'ch' bit should be pronounced as in Scottish 'loch' or German 'doch'.
greek
σχολείο (scholeío)
school
"Leisure, philosophy, or place where lectures are given."
The Greek root word that means an institution designed for learning is "schole," which is the root of words like school and scholastic.
Athenian leader Pericles referred to Athens as the 'school of Hellas', Hellas being the Greek word for Greece, and he was claiming that the schools of Greek philosophers at Athens were the centre of learning.
You might be thinking of gymnasion, a greek word for a sports school and where our current word gymnasium derives. The word gymnos in Greek, incidently, meant naked.
The latin word was "schola", which derived from the Greek word "skhole" meaning "school, lecture, discussion". Finding out where a word comes from is called "etymology", so next time you need to know where a word comes from google "etymology" and the word.
Originally from Greek (meaning leisure, discussion, lecture, school), then to Latin, Old English, and Middle English.
In the sense of "place of instruction," Old English scol,from Latin schola, from Greek skhole "school, lecture, discussion,"
The root of the word "cynical" comes from the ancient Greek word "kynikos," which pertained to the belief system of the Cynics, a school of ancient Greek philosophers who emphasized self-sufficiency and living in accordance with nature.
the greek word for egg is: avgo