A school teaches things to its pupils and students
The teacher teaches the pupils/students
yes sometimes in a mosque there is an Iman who sometimes teaches pupils the religion!
The opposite of dilated pupils is constricted pupils.
Pupils'. When you have a plural possessive, then the apostrophe goes after the s. If a pupil owns something, that is the pupil's stuff. If pupils collectively own something, that is the pupils' stuff.
Owl's pupils get bigger because there pupils react to movement and light causing them to enlarge there pupils.
The possessive form of "assignment of the pupils" is "the pupils' assignment."
pupil slipups, pupils slipup, pupils pupils, slipup pupils
Dilated pupils are bigger, and constrictred pupils are smaller.
pupils of the same size
1,252 pupils
no it would be "The pupils and I" - Complete answer: Yes and no, it depends on whether it is the subject of the verb or not. We say The teacher watched me and the pupils at the same time. But we say The pupils and I want to go outside.