Every time your teacher turns around, have one person leave the room. The person would be standing in the hallway. Have one person leave every time he turns around. See how long it takes him to notice the missing people. When he does, all the people in the hallway walk in.
The magician was able to baffle the children with his tricks. To baffle is to confuse or make something difficult to understand. Charlie, usually quiet in class, would baffle his teacher with his antics.
He dose something
The verb of confusion is confuse. As in "to confuse someone" or "to confuse something".
Both the class' teacher the class's teacher are considered correct
Draw your teacher on a vacation, draw your entire class (including him/her), etc. You really could just draw anything to do with summer or the class.
If you feel the chemistry teacher is wrong then have your facts straight; have any literature contrary to what the chemistry teacher has said and stay after class to discuss it will the chemistry teacher and do not discuss this while other students are present in class.
to have all of your students to make at least a c or better in your class. because if they don't then you know that the teacher may have something to do with it.
The root of "confusing" is "confuse." It means to make something unclear or difficult to understand.
If you do not understand something the teacher said, it's important to ask for clarification either during or after class. Communicate your confusion respectfully and seek help to ensure you grasp the material. It's okay to not understand something at first, but resisting the class may hinder your own learning progress.
"The class" is the indirect object. In English, the indirect object is usually something that could also be expressed by putting "to" in front of it. The sentence could be rephrased "The teacher told a story to the class."
class width is a width width is a width nothing as class width is a width dont be confuse
a teacher that minds the class when the main teacher is off :)