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word usage - High-schooler vs. high schooler - English Language . . . High schooler was a distant third, and high-schooler barely mapped This result was surprising given the rule of hyphenating compound adjectives, but I guess that high school without a hyphen is a standard morphology
single word requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I used to go to a school where the primary (elementary) and secondary (middle+high) schools both share the same area So basically as a secondary schooler, I could walk to the primary side without
What to call Primary School + High School, but not College The description of pre-college education as "compulsory" is 1 ) rather British (as is the word "compulsory" itself, imo); and 2 ) not strictly correct in the US, since students may drop out before completing high school
What is the proper usage of high school as an adjective? 0 I want to indicate that a friend's brother is in high school For example, I was not close with my friend's high-school brother Is this construction correct? Should it be high-schooler brother instead? Is the hyphen necessary? Or is there another preferred way to say that my friend's brother is in high school?
What does “rising senior” mean and what countries use it? You'll need to complete a few actions and gain 15 reputation points before being able to upvote Upvoting indicates when questions and answers are useful What's reputation and how do I get it? Instead, you can save this post to reference later
Which one has the closest meaning for the sentence? I'm a 10th grade Turkish high-schooler Today, we had the final English exam but one question confused me: Choose the closest one for the sentence below: That red car is the least expen
vocabulary - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I'm trying to come up with terms to describe the various age ranges for children up through teenager and I'm stuck trying to describe someone who's in the age range of about 6 through 10 In other
Is calling someone old school- offensive derogatory? The safest answer is: Yes There is a very strong derogatory flavour often associated with the noun-as-adjective According to this article from The Age: To say something is "old school" has become a pejorative [usage] It implies out-of-date thinking This association is not guaranteed to be assumed by a listener or intended by a speaker, but the term should only be used with great caution
american english - What is a secondary school graduate called . . . In UK we don't have "high school" as a general type of school, although some have that in their name, for example "Stamford High School" So "high school graduate" is an AmE term In UK students who are at secondary school "leave school" For example "Pete left school at age 18 with three A-levels" But "Peter graduated from Cambridge University with a First"