In school, in the school, at school and at the school are all grammatically correct, with different meaning. Which one to use depends on context.
Parochial schools is the name for church-sponsored schools.
Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.
Pasting is the correct spelling.Pasting is the correct spelling.Pasting is the correct spelling.Pasting is the correct spelling.Pasting is the correct spelling.Pasting is the correct spelling.Pasting is the correct spelling.Pasting is the correct spelling.Pasting is the correct spelling.Pasting is the correct spelling.Pasting is the correct spelling.
No. Schooling is the present participle, or gerund form, of the verb to school (to teach). It does not have a plural.
A collective noun for schools is a district of schools.
The statement is technically correct but not clear. It would be improved by providing more context or specifying what schools have not completed.
The correct term is "inter-school." It is used to refer to activities, competitions, or events that involve multiple schools.
All of the answers are correct
THE CORRECT ANSWER IS... ---- Cavaliers
The correct spelling is "scholastic" (dealing with schools and scholars).
You can find more information on nutrition schools online and from doctors. Doctors should be able to point you in the correct direction for nutrition schools.
The best physical therapy schools are ones that allow students to practice on real people, to develop the correct skills to help people. These schools should help in placement.
That is the correct spelling, but tuition is seldom used in the plural as tuitions, except where separate payments are made, e.g. The tuitions of the two schools increasedcould also be expressed as The tuition at both schools was increased.
Both are correct.The spelling schools' is the possessive form of the plural noun schools.The spelling school's is the possessive form of the singular noun school.Examples:Both of our schools' teams will be in the finals. (plural possessive, the teams of two schools)Our school's mascot is at every game. (singular possessive, the mascot of one school)
Oklahoma City Public Schools are closed only because the subject is plural and must have a singular verb "are."
Both are grammatically correct:school's is the possessive form of the singularnoun school;schools' is the possessive form of the pluralnoun schools.Examples:Our school's schedule is from 8:30 to 2:20.-- Singular, the schedule of one school.All of the schools' schedules are set by the board.-- Plural, the schedules of all the schools.
It's actually the 'Corn Husker,' but you are correct.