you provided him a suitable school
Both would be correct grammar, but "at your school" would probably be more suitable.
What is grammatically correct is "in the space provided" not "on the space provide" and yes, delete "for"
You got it; suitable is correct,
The correct spelling is satisfactory (acceptable, suitable).
"Accurate" is a suitable word that means proven to be correct.
Provided she can do the job, no, there is nothing wrong.
The correct spelling is "inappropriate (not appropriate or suitable).
The correct spelling is "inappropriate (not appropriate or suitable).
You ran to school.
It's get to school
You are in school would be correct if it was said like "I am in school." You are at school would be correct when used like "She is at school."But, this answer does not clarify a thing. Namely, whether it is more correct to say "at school" or "in school" - and if both are correct, which one is used in which situation/context.
no