This is a common proverb. It is a variation of "I can show you the door, but you must walk through it." In the quoted case, it means that a teacher can give you the tools and the direction, but it is the student is ultimately takes the steps to understanding.
If you teacher is truly mean and unreasonable, tell your parents and the principal or vice principal. Do not confront the teacher yourself.
A cross on a door typically means that the house has been blessed. It can also be a symbol for blessing those who enter the home.
It's how easy it is to get into a place( i.e. how easy is it to enter a house from the door or window)
Mean TeachersYes, there are mean teachers. There are also teachers who get accused of being mean when they are only attempting to teach their students.
"Wolf at the door" is an idiom referring to hunger, so if you drive the wolf away, you're keeping yourself from starving.
He meant that you can only enter Heaven through Him. Like a doorway, and we are the sheep.
An anteroom is a room you enter before you enter the main room. A cloakroom just inside a door is an anteroom. So is the waiting room of an office.
It's not clear - I think you mean, "Either the students or the teachers can join." Or perhaps you mean, "Both students and teachers can join."
nice and mean.
Teachers ( female).
cuz' teachers are mean
WHAT on earth do you mean class room teachers is not enough information