Yes, but leave out into is better.
I entered the classroom.
You have entered the room.
"He entered the room" is the way the sentence should read
Both of those sentences are correct but he first one would be more appropriate to say.
Purgatory can be a noun or an adjective. She felt like their relationship had entered purgatory. The classroom discussion turned to the idea of purgatory.
The correct pronoun would be "I": Lorna and I entered the room.To make this clearer, you would say "I entered the room." rather than "Me entered the room".The pronoun "I" is a subject pronoun. The subject of the sentence is "Lorna and I", a compound subject.The pronoun "me" is an object pronoun, a word used as the object of a verb or a preposition.Example: The door opened for Lorna and me. (the compound object of the preposition 'for')
She entered the room
No. We say at your school, but in your classroom
Derision is a word used to describe mockery. A good example sentence would be, the boy was greeted with derision when he entered the classroom.
My company has entered into.....
Please move to the next classroom. This classroom is damp and chilly.
The word for a place of education is one word, classroom.
This classroom has more chairs than that one.