I think most veterinary schools don't really take into account what classes you take in high school. What they're going to pay attention to is what classes you took in college (which your high school classes will affect) and your animal/veterinary experience. Just make sure you fulfill all the veterinary pre-requisites during college, get good grades (you have to have a 3.6-3.8 just to be competitive!), and get a lot of experience. (:
Mostly all people speak English and afrikaans ( those are the 2 languages learn't in schools) and there are more xhosa speaking people there than zulu :)
Millitary schools are designed to help people that have had disciplinary problems
the language people speak in Tokyo is 日本後 Nihongo (Japanese) the writen languages (alphabet) is Hiragana, Katakana, Romaji and Kanji
There are roughly 6,800 languages according to the Ethnologue Organization and Linguistic Society of America estimates, but it is difficult to establish the actual number. We are losing languages by the month as native speakers of those languages die out. There may be places where schools qualify people to learn local native languages. This may have the effect of hastening the deaths of some languages by too tightly restricting the numbers of people who can learn them.
After a while. people started to accept this innovation.
The Khoikhoi people speak Khoi, one of Khoisan languages--the Khoisan languages are the click languages--spoken in Southern Africa.
I believe that most programming languages are written in English, however things such as variable names are programmer-defined; it is only the keywords that are unchangeable. I'm sure that someone can or has written parsers/compilers which accept keywords in languages other than English.
segregated white people had their own schools and black people had their own schools
jamaican people speak two languages
There are some states that do allow people to take traffic schools online. There is a fee that you have to pay. You have to score well or some states will make you do it over in a traditional class setting.
No.English is sometimes an available subject in Haitian schools, but very few people can speak it fluently. For more information about the languages of Haiti, click here.
The Aboriginals had many languages.