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I'm not sure I understand your question. What phrase are you asking about, "children for school?"

If that is what you mean, it could be correct depending on how it is used in the sentence. For example, a sentence such as "We must prepare the children for school." would be correct. If you make your question a bit clearer I could help more.

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13y ago

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Related Questions

Is correct to say where is your children' school?

No. The sentence should be written "Where is your children's school?" A plural that does not end in the letter "s" requires "'s" to form its possessive case, whereas a plural ending in "s" required only the apostrophe.


Is it proper to say you have to be at school for noon instead of you have to be at school at noon?

The correct phrase would be "You have to be at school at noon."


Is it correct English ' i did schooling'?

Your phrase is not good English - 'I went to school or I was at school or I have been to school' would be better


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"Back to school" is correct. The phrase refers to the time period when students return to their educational institutions after a break.


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The term 'assigned reading,' in the context of school would be correct: a teacher could assign reading to a child. Any context where some sort of reading is assigned is correct.


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Daria and children are"is" - singular"Are" for plural


Is the phrase non fluoride children toothpaste wrong?

The correct noun phrase is: non-fluoride children'stoothpasteThe noun 'children' should be the possessive form to indicate that it is 'toothpaste intended for children'.The word 'non fluoride' should be hyphenated.


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'In the hope that' is the correct phrase.


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If you are referring to this sentence, no, it does not resemble a correct phrase AT ALL.


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