school binder = cartable (french Canadian) or classeur (french European)
*classeur = filing cabinet in French Canadian
*cartable = a kind of school bag in French European
The first school binder was invented in the 1850s by a Swedish inventor named Rudolf Granberg. Granberg developed a type of loose-leaf notebook that allowed pages to be easily added or removed, similar to modern binders.
I am a virtual assistant and do not have a physical binder. How can I assist you today?
public school
A binder is a material or device used to hold loose papers together, often consisting of a cover with metal rings or clamps to secure the pages. Binders are commonly used for organization and filing documents.
The word for a person who attends school is "student."
A binder (school item) is 'un classeur' (masc.) in French.
In French, the word "binder" is masculine, so it is "un classeur."
le classeur.
The French word for middle school is "collège."
un classeur (masc.) is a binder in French.
école - school
put school work in it
"Un classeur" is French for "a binder" or "a filing cabinet," used to organize and store documents or papers.
feminine
bind
It depends on what grade you're in and what exactly you will be using the binder for. Please try and be specific when asking questions like this. It is recommended to talk to the school to find out what size binder is required or suggested.
Un cartable, un classeur (à anneaux) and un reliure (à anneaux) are French equivalents of the English phrase "a binder." The masculine singular terms also translate literally and respectively as "one binder" in Canada (case 1), "one binder (with rings)" in France (example 2) and "one binder (with rings)" in the French-speaking world (instance 3). The respective pronunciations will be "eh kar-tab," "eh kla-syoo-a-no" and "eh ruh-lyoo-ra-no" in French.