my schol has good teachers
of school
Yes, if there is more than one school, but if there is only one school, it is "school's".
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.
Do you know what correct grammar is? Do you know what correct grammar is?
Here is the central school staff. (As it refers to one unit.)
it's "He arrived early at school", although i think the other one is correct too
You ran to school.
It's get to school
Notre Dame is the correct capitalization of the school.
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.
No, the correct statement is "Are you going to school?" using the verb "are" instead of "is."
Not correct. Also, the idiomatic imperfect with "used to" is rather informal for an essay. Use Was that not a school ( you could use wasn't that a school, but generally we avoid contractions in serious essays). If you feel you must use "used to," put the question at the end: That used to be a school, did it not?