la salle de bains means the bathroom in french
La sale de classe is 'the classroom' in English.
Bathroom
"There's a window in the classroom" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Il y a une fenêtre dans la salle de classe. The declarative statement also translates as "There'is one window in the classroom." The pronunciation will be "ee-lya yoon fuh-net daw la sald klas" in northerly French and "ee-lya yoon fuh-neh-truh daw la sa-luh duh kla-suh" in southerly French.
"There are how many floors?" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Il y a combien d'étages? The question also translates more loosely as "How many storeys are there?" The pronunciation will be "ee ya ko-bya dey-tazh" in French.
powder room
Dans la classe de français means "in French class" in French. Dans la classe de français il y a dix-neuf élèves: there are nineteen students in French class.
Class (an hour-long lesson with the teacher) is translated 'le cours' - Class (all the pupils attending the course in the same classroom at some given moment) is 'la classe' Examples: he fell asleep during French class > il s'est endormi pendant le cours de français. Il y a beaucoup d'élèves dans la classe de mademoiselle Dupont > there are many pupils in miss Dupont's class.
Une salle de classe means classroom. Une salle = room de = of classe = class --> Classroom
There are several translations for classroom in French: classe, salle de classe, or salle.
"Il y a 1 élève dans ma salle de classe" means "There is 1 student in my classroom" in English.
salle de classe
salle de classe
salle de classe
Les attentes en classe.
"Un sallie de classe" seems to be a French phrase used in Haiti to refer to a school uniform. It is commonly worn by students in classrooms to promote unity and equality among them.
"There's a window in the classroom" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Il y a une fenêtre dans la salle de classe. The declarative statement also translates as "There'is one window in the classroom." The pronunciation will be "ee-lya yoon fuh-net daw la sald klas" in northerly French and "ee-lya yoon fuh-neh-truh daw la sa-luh duh kla-suh" in southerly French.
les élèves sont dans la salle de classe
"There are how many floors?" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Il y a combien d'étages? The question also translates more loosely as "How many storeys are there?" The pronunciation will be "ee ya ko-bya dey-tazh" in French.
"At what time is French class?" (note that in mainland France, we would say 'le cours de français', and use 'classe' for 'classroom'.)