A school is an educational institution designed to provide learning spaces and learning environments for the teaching of students under the direction of teachers. Most countries have systems of formal education, which is sometimes compulsory.[2] In these systems, students progress through a series of schools. The names for these schools vary by country (discussed in the Regional terms section below) but generally include primary school for young children and secondary school for teenagers who have completed primary education. An institution where higher education is taught is commonly called a university college or university.
In addition to these core schools, students in a given country may also attend schools before and after primary (elementary in the U.S.) and secondary (middle school in the U.S.) education.[3] Kindergarten or preschool provide some schooling to very young children (typically ages 3–5). University, vocational school, college or seminary may be available after secondary school. A school may be dedicated to one particular field, such as a school of economics or dance. Alternative schools may provide nontraditional curriculum and methods.
Non-government schools, also known as private schools,[4] may be required when the government does not supply adequate or specific educational needs. Other private schools can also be religious, such as Christian schools, gurukula (Hindu schools), madrasa (Arabic schools), hawzas (Shi’i Muslim schools), yeshivas (Jewish schools), and others; or schools that have a higher standard of education or seek to foster other personal achievements. Schools for adults include institutions of corporate training, military education and training and business schools.
Critics of school often accuse the school system of failing to adequately prepare students for their future lives,[5] of encouraging certain temperaments while inhibiting others,[6] of prescribing students exactly what to do, how, when, where and with whom, which would suppress creativity,[7] and of using extrinsic measures such as grades and homework, which would inhibit children’s natural curiosity and desire to learn.[8]
In homeschooling and distance education, teaching and learning take place independent from the institution of school or in a virtual school outside a traditional school building, respectively. Schools are organized in several different organizational models, including departmental, small learning communities, academies, integrated, and schools-within-a-school.
Etymology
The word school derives from Greek σχολή (scholē), originally meaning «leisure» and also «that in which leisure is employed», but later «a group to whom lectures were given, school».[9][10][11]
History and development
The concept of grouping students together in a centralized location for learning has existed since Classical antiquity. Formal schools have existed at least since ancient Greece (see Academy), ancient Rome (see Education in Ancient Rome) ancient India (see Gurukul), and ancient China (see History of education in China). The Byzantine Empire had an established schooling system beginning at the primary level. According to Traditions and Encounters, the founding of the primary education system began in 425 AD and «… military personnel usually had at least a primary education …». The sometimes efficient and often large government of the Empire meant that educated citizens were a must. Although Byzantium lost much of the grandeur of Roman culture and extravagance in the process of surviving, the Empire emphasized efficiency in its war manuals. The Byzantine education system continued until the empire’s collapse in 1453 AD.[12]
In Western Europe, a considerable number of cathedral schools were founded during the Early Middle Ages in order to teach future clergy and administrators, with the oldest still existing, and continuously operated, cathedral schools being The King’s School, Canterbury (established 597 CE), King’s School, Rochester (established 604 CE), St Peter’s School, York (established 627 CE) and Thetford Grammar School (established 631 CE). Beginning in the 5th century CE, monastic schools were also established throughout Western Europe, teaching religious and secular subjects.
In Europe, universities emerged during the 12th century; here, scholasticism was an important tool, and the academicians were called schoolmen. During the Middle Ages and much of the Early Modern period, the main purpose of schools (as opposed to universities) was to teach the Latin language. This led to the term grammar school, which in the United States informally refers to a primary school, but in the United Kingdom means a school that selects entrants based on ability or aptitude. The school curriculum has gradually broadened to include literacy in the vernacular language and technical, artistic, scientific, and practical subjects.
Obligatory school attendance became common in parts of Europe during the 18th century. In Denmark-Norway, this was introduced as early as in 1739–1741, the primary end being to increase the literacy of the almue, i.e., the «regular people».[13] Many of the earlier public schools in the United States and elsewhere were one-room schools where a single teacher taught seven grades of boys and girls in the same classroom. Beginning in the 1920s, one-room schools were consolidated into multiple classroom facilities with transportation increasingly provided by kid hacks and school buses.
Islam was another culture that developed a school system in the modern sense of the word. Emphasis was put on knowledge, which required a systematic way of teaching and spreading knowledge and purpose-built structures. At first, mosques combined religious performance and learning activities. However, by the 9th century, the madrassa was introduced, a school that was built independently from the mosque, such as al-Qarawiyyin, founded in 859 CE. They were also the first to make the Madrassa system a public domain under Caliph’s control.
Under the Ottomans, the towns of Bursa and Edirne became the main centers of learning. The Ottoman system of Külliye, a building complex containing a mosque, a hospital, madrassa, and public kitchen and dining areas, revolutionized the education system, making learning accessible to a broader public through its free meals, health care, and sometimes free accommodation.
Regional terms
The term school varies by country, as do the names of the various levels of education within the country.
United Kingdom and Commonwealth of Nations
In the United Kingdom, the term school refers primarily to pre-university institutions, and these can, for the most part, be divided into pre-schools or nursery schools, primary schools (sometimes further divided into infant school and junior school), and secondary schools. Various types of secondary schools in England and Wales include grammar schools, comprehensives, secondary moderns, and city academies. While they may have different names in Scotland, there is only one type of secondary school. However, they may be funded either by the state or independently funded. Scotland’s school performance is monitored by Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Education. Ofsted reports on performance in England and Estyn reports on performance in Wales.
In the United Kingdom, most schools are publicly funded and known as state schools or maintained schools in which tuition is provided for free. There are also private schools or private schools that charge fees. Some of the most selective and expensive private schools are known as public schools, a usage that can be confusing to speakers of North American English. In North American usage, a public school is publicly funded or run.
In much of the Commonwealth of Nations, including Australia, New Zealand, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, South Africa, Kenya, and Tanzania, the term school refers primarily to pre-university institutions.
India
In ancient India, schools were in the form of Gurukuls. Gurukuls were traditional Hindu residential learning schools, typically the teacher’s house or a monastery. Schools today are commonly known by the Sanskrit terms Vidyashram, Vidyalayam, Vidya Mandir, Vidya Bhavan in India.[14][15] In southern languages, it is known as Pallikoodam or PaadaSaalai. During the Mughal rule, Madrasahs were introduced in India to educate the children of Muslim parents. British records show that indigenous education was widespread in the 18th century, with a school for every temple, mosque, or village in most regions. The subjects taught included Reading, Writing, Arithmetic, Theology, Law, Astronomy, Metaphysics, Ethics, Medical Science, and Religion.
A school building in Kannur, India
Under British rule, Christian missionaries from England, the United States, and other countries established missionary and boarding schools in India. Later as these schools gained popularity, more were started, and some gained prestige. These schools marked the beginning of modern schooling in India. The syllabus and calendar they followed became the benchmark for schools in modern India. Today most schools follow the missionary school model for tutoring, subject/syllabus, and governance, with minor changes.
Schools in India range from large campuses with thousands of students and hefty fees to schools where children are taught under a tree with a small / no campus and are free of cost. There are various boards of schools in India, namely Central Board for Secondary Education (CBSE), Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (CISCE), Madrasa Boards of various states, Matriculation Boards of various states, State Boards of various boards, Anglo Indian Board, among others. Today’s typical syllabus includes Language(s), Mathematics, Science – Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Geography, History, General Knowledge, and Information Technology/Computer Science. Extracurricular activities include physical education/sports and cultural activities like music, choreography, painting, and theatre/drama.
Europe
In much of continental Europe, the term school usually applies to primary education, with primary schools that last between four and nine years, depending on the country. It also applies to secondary education, with secondary schools often divided between Gymnasiums and vocational schools, which again, depending on country and type of school, educate students for between three and six years. In Germany, students graduating from Grundschule are not allowed to progress into a vocational school directly. Instead, they are supposed to proceed to one of Germany’s general education schools such as Gesamtschule, Hauptschule, Realschule or Gymnasium. When they leave that school, which usually happens at age 15–19, they may proceed to a vocational school. The term school is rarely used for tertiary education, except for some upper or high schools (German: Hochschule), which describe colleges and universities.
In Eastern Europe modern schools (after World War II), of both primary and secondary educations, often are combined. In contrast, secondary education might be split into accomplished or not. The schools are classified as middle schools of general education. For the technical purposes, they include «degrees» of the education they provide out of three available: the first – primary, the second – unaccomplished secondary, and the third – accomplished secondary. Usually, the first two degrees of education (eight years) are always included. In contrast, the last one (two years) permits the students to pursue vocational or specialized educations.
North America and the United States
In North America, the term school can refer to any educational institution at any level and covers all of the following: preschool (for toddlers), kindergarten, elementary school, middle school (also called intermediate school or junior high school, depending on specific age groups and geographic region), high school (or in some cases senior high school), college, university, and graduate school.
In the United States, school performance through high school is monitored by each state’s department of education. Charter schools are publicly funded elementary or secondary schools that have been freed from some of the rules, regulations, and statutes that apply to other public schools. The terms grammar school and grade school are sometimes[why?] used to refer to a primary school. In addition, there are tax-funded magnet schools which offer different programs and instruction not available in traditional schools.
Africa
In West Africa, «school» can also refer to «bush» schools, Quranic schools, or apprenticeships. These schools include formal and informal learning.
Bush schools are training camps that pass down cultural skills, traditions, and knowledge to their students. Bush schools are semi-similar to traditional western schools because they are separated from the larger community. These schools are located in forests outside of the towns and villages, and the space used is solely for these schools. Once the students have arrived in the forest, they cannot leave until their training is complete. Visitors are prohibited from these areas.[16]
Instead of being separated by age, Bush schools are separated by gender. Women and girls cannot enter the boys’ bush school territory and vice versa. Boys receive training in cultural crafts, fighting, hunting, and community laws among other subjects.[17] Girls are trained in their own version of the boys’ bush school. They practice domestic affairs such as cooking, childcare, and being a good wife. Their training is focused on how to be a proper woman by societal standards.
Qur’anic schools are the principal way of teaching the Quran and knowledge of the Islamic faith. These schools also fostered literacy and writing during the time of colonization. Today, the emphasis is on the different levels of reading, memorizing, and reciting the Quran. Attending a Qur’anic school is how children become recognized members of the Islamic faith. Children often attend state schools and a Qur’anic school.
In Mozambique, specifically, there are two kinds of Qur’anic schools. They are the tariqa based and the Wahhabi-based schools. What makes these schools different is who controls them. Tariqa schools are controlled at the local level. In contrast, the Wahhabi are controlled by the Islamic Council.[18] Within the Qur’anic school system, there are levels of education. They range from a basic level of understanding, called chuo and kioni in local languages, to the most advanced, which is called ilimu.[19]
In Nigeria, the term school broadly covers daycares, nursery schools, primary schools, secondary schools and tertiary institutions. Primary and secondary schools are either privately funded by religious institutions and corporate organisations or government-funded. Government-funded schools are commonly referred to as public schools. Students spend six years in primary school, three years in junior secondary school, and three years in senior secondary school. The first nine years of formal schooling is compulsory under the Universal Basic Education Program (UBEC).[20] Tertiary institutions include public and private universities, polytechnics, and colleges of education. Universities can be funded by the federal government, state governments, religious institutions, or individuals and organisations.
Ownership and operation
Many schools are owned or funded by states. Private schools operate independently from the government. Private schools usually rely on fees from families whose children attend the school for funding; however, sometimes such schools also receive government support (for example, through School vouchers). Many private schools are affiliated with a particular religion; these are known as parochial schools.
Components of most schools
A school entrance building in Australia
Schools are organized spaces purposed for teaching and learning. The classrooms where teachers teach and students learn are of central importance. Classrooms may be specialized for certain subjects, such as laboratory classrooms for science education and workshops for industrial arts education.
Typical schools have many other rooms and areas, which may include:
- Cafeteria (Commons), dining hall or canteen where students eat lunch and often breakfast and snacks.
- Athletic field, playground, gym, or track place where students participating in sports or physical education practice
- Schoolyards, all-purpose playfields typically in elementary schools, often made of concrete.
- Auditorium or hall where student theatrical and musical productions can be staged and where all-school events such as assemblies are held
- Office where the administrative work of the school is done
- Library where students ask librarians reference questions, check out books and magazines, and often use computers
- Computer labs where computer-based work is done and the internet accessed
- Cultural activities where the students uphold their cultural practice through activities like games, dance, and music
Education facilities in low-income countries
In low-income countries, only 32% of primary, 43% of lower secondary and 52% of upper secondary schools have access to electricity.[21] This affects access to the internet, which is just 37% in upper secondary schools in low-income countries, as compared to 59% in those in middle-income countries and 93% in those in high-income countries.[21]
Access to basic water, sanitation and hygiene is also far from universal. Among upper secondary schools, only 53% in low-income countries and 84% in middle-income countries have access to basic drinking water. Access to water and sanitation is universal in high-income countries.[21]
Security
The safety of staff and students is increasingly becoming an issue for school communities, an issue most schools are addressing through improved security. Some have also taken measures such as installing metal detectors or video surveillance. Others have even taken measures such as having the children swipe identification cards as they board the school bus. These plans have included door numbering to aid public safety response for some schools.[clarification needed]
Other security concerns faced by schools include bomb threats, gangs, and vandalism.[22] In recognition of these threats, the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 4 advocates for upgrading education facilities to provide a safe, non-violent learning environment.[23]
Health services
School health services are services from medical, teaching and other professionals applied in or out of school to improve the health and well-being of children and, in some cases, whole families. These services have been developed in different ways around the globe. However, the fundamentals are constant: the early detection, correction, prevention, or amelioration of disease, disability, and abuse from which school-aged children can suffer.
Online schools and classes
Some schools offer remote access to their classes over the internet. Online schools also can provide support to traditional schools, as in the case of the School Net Namibia. Some online classes also provide experience in a class. When people take them, they have already been introduced to the subject and know what to expect. Classes provide high school/college credit, allowing students to take the classes at their own pace. Many online classes cost money to take, but some are offered free.
Internet-based distance learning programs are offered widely through many universities. Instructors teach through online activities and assignments. Online classes are taught the same as in-person, with the same curriculum. The instructor offers the syllabus with their fixed requirements like any other class. Students can virtually turn their assignments in to their instructors according to deadlines. This being through via email or on the course webpage. This allows students to work at their own pace yet meet the correct deadlines. Students taking an online class have more flexibility in their schedules to take their classes at a time that works best.
Conflicts with taking an online class may include not being face to face with the instructor when learning or being in an environment with other students. Online classes can also make understanding the content challenging, especially when unable to get in quick contact with the instructor. Online students have the advantage of using other online sources with assignments or exams for that specific class. Online classes also have the advantage of students not needing to leave their house for a morning class or worrying about their attendance for that class. Students can work at their own pace to learn and achieve within that curriculum.[24]
The convenience of learning at home has been an attraction point for enrolling online. Students can attend class anywhere a computer can go – at home, in a library, or while traveling internationally. Online school classes are designed to fit a student’s needs while allowing students to continue working and tending to their other obligations.[25] Online school education is divided into three subcategories: Online Elementary School, Online Middle School, Online High school.
Stress
As a profession, teaching has levels of work-related stress (WRS)[26] that are among the highest of any profession in some countries, such as the United Kingdom and the United States.[27] The degree of this problem is becoming increasingly recognized and support systems are being put into place.[28][29]
Stress sometimes affects students more severely than teachers, up to the point where the students are prescribed stress medication. This stress is claimed to be related to standardized testing, and the pressure on students to score above average.[30][31]
According to a 2008 mental health study by the Associated Press and mtvU,[32] eight in 10 U.S. college students said they had sometimes or frequently experienced stress in their daily lives. This was an increase of 20% from a survey five years previously. Thirty-four percent had felt depressed at some point in the past three months, 13 percent had been diagnosed with a mental health condition such as an anxiety disorder or depression, and 9 percent had seriously considered suicide.[32]
Discipline towards students
The activity of carrying out the flag ceremony at Indonesian schools every Monday morning, With the aim of educating discipline and a sense of national spirit
Schools and their teachers have always been under pressure – for instance, pressure to cover the curriculum, perform well compared to other schools, and avoid the stigma of being «soft» or «spoiling» toward students. Forms of discipline, such as control over when students may speak, and normalized behaviour, such as raising a hand to speak, are imposed in the name of greater efficiency. Practitioners of critical pedagogy maintain that such disciplinary measures have no positive effect on student learning. Indeed, some argue that disciplinary practices detract from learning, saying that they undermine students’ dignity and sense of self-worth – the latter occupying a more primary role in students’ hierarchy of needs.
See also
- Bullying in teaching
- Criticism of schooling
- Educational technology
- Free education
- List of colleges and universities by country
- List of schools by country
- List of songs about school
- List of television series about school
- Mobile phone use in schools
- Music school
- Secular education
- School and university in literature
- School bullying
- School meal
- School story
- School uniform
- School-to-prison pipeline
- Student transport
- Teaching for social justice
- University-preparatory school
- Year-round school
References
- ^ Research handbook on innovation governance for emerging economies : towards better models. Kuhlmann, Stefan. Cheltehnham, UK. 27 January 2017. ISBN 978-1-78347-191-1. OCLC 971520924.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ Roser, Max; Ortiz-Ospina, Esteban (2019). «Primary and Secondary Education». Our World in Data. Retrieved 24 October 2019.
- ^ «Understanding the American Education System». www.studyusa.com. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
- ^ [1], Ganesh Harpavat, International Schools, on Perseus
- ^ «Schools don’t prepare children for life. Here’s the education they really need | Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett». The Guardian. 12 June 2017. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
- ^ Keogh, Barbara (9 September 2009). «Why it’s important to understand your child’s temperament». www.greatschools.org. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
- ^ Robinson, Sir Ken (27 June 2006), Do schools kill creativity?, retrieved 4 August 2021
- ^ «‘Schools are killing curiosity’: why we need to stop telling children to shut up and learn». The Guardian. 28 January 2020. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
- ^ Online Etymology Dictionary; H.G. Liddell & R. Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon
- ^ School[dead link], on Oxford Dictionaries
- ^ σχολή, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus
- ^ Bentley, Jerry H. (2006). Traditions & Encounters a Global Perspective on the Past. New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 331.
- ^ «Leseferdighet og skolevesen 1740–1830» (PDF). Open Digital Archive. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 April 2016. Retrieved 15 May 2014.
- ^ «School Meaning Sanskrit Arth Translate Kya Matlab». www.bsarkari.com. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
- ^ www.wisdomlib.org (13 January 2019). «Vidyalaya, Vidyālaya, Vidya-alaya: 7 definitions». www.wisdomlib.org. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
- ^ Watkins Hanna, Mark (May 1943). «The West African «Bush» School». American Journal of Sociology. 48 (6): 666–675. doi:10.1086/219263. S2CID 144208852.
- ^ Watkins Hanna, Mark (May 1943). «The West African «Bush» Schools». American Journal of Sociology. 48 (6): 666–675. doi:10.1086/219263. S2CID 144208852.
- ^ Bonate, Liazat (2016). Islamic Education in Africa. Indiana University Press.
- ^ Bonate, Lizzat (2016). Islamic Education in Africa. Indiana University Press.[ISBN missing]
- ^ «Universal Basic Education Commission | Home». www.ubec.gov.ng. Retrieved 17 December 2019.
- ^ a b c #CommitToEducation. UNESCO. 2019. ISBN 978-92-3-100336-3.
- ^ «School Vandalism Takes Its Toll». Wrensolutions.com. Archived from the original on 6 December 2009. Retrieved 3 October 2009.
- ^ «SDG4’s 10 targets». Global Campaign For Education. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
- ^ Laird, Ellen. «I’m Your Teacher, Not Your Internet-Service Provider.» Chronicle of Higher Education n.d.: n.p. Print
- ^ «Online Education Offers Access and Affordability». Usnews.com. Retrieved 17 May 2015.
- ^ «Work-Related Stress in teaching». Wrsrecovery.com. Retrieved 3 October 2009.
- ^ Ross, Genesis R. (2010). Teacher Stress, Burnout and NCLB: The U.S. Educational Ecosystem and the Adaptation of Teachers (MS thesis). Miami University. Retrieved 18 December 2012.
- ^ «Teacher Support for England & Wales». Teachersupport.info. Retrieved 3 October 2009.
- ^ «Teacher Support for Scotland». Teachersupport.info. Retrieved 3 October 2009.
- ^ «Survey confirms student stress, but next step is unclear (May 06, 2005)». Paloaltoonline.com. 6 May 2005. Retrieved 3 October 2009.
- ^ «Children & School Anxiety, Stress Management». Webmd.com. Retrieved 28 March 2010.
- ^ a b «mtvU and Associated Press poll shows how stress, war, the economy and other factors are affecting college students’ mental health» (PDF). Half Of Us. 19 March 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 February 2013.
Further reading
- Dodge, B. (1962). Muslim Education in the Medieval Times, The Middle East Institute, Washington D.C.
- Education as Enforcement: The Militarization and Corporatization of Schools, edited by Kenneth J. Saltman and David A. Gabbard, RoutledgeFalmer 2003. Review.
- Makdisi, G. (1980). On the origin and development of the college in Islam and the West, in Islam and the Medieval West, ed. Khalil I. Semaan, State University of New York Press.
- Nakosteen, M. (1964). History of Islamic origins of Western Education AD 800–1350, University of Colorado Press, Boulder.
- Ribera, J. (1928). Disertaciones Y Opusculos, 2 vols., Madrid.
- Spielhofer, Thomas, Tom Benton, Sandie Schagen. «A study of the effects of school size and single-sex education in English schools.» Research Papers in Education, June 2004:133 159, 27.
- Toppo, Greg. «High-tech school security is on the rise.» USA Today, 9 October 2006.
- Traditions and Encounters, by Jerry H. Bentley and Herb F. Ziegler.
Sources
This article incorporates text from a free content work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO. Text taken from #CommitToEducation, 35, UNESCO, UNESCO. UNESCO. To learn how to add open license text to Wikipedia articles, please see this how-to page. For information on reusing text from Wikipedia, please see the terms of use.
External links
Recent Examples on the Web
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See More
These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word ‘school.’ Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
school 1
(sko͞ol)
n.
1. An institution for the instruction of children or people under college age.
2. An institution for instruction in a skill or business: a secretarial school; a karate school.
3.
a. A college or university.
b. An institution within or associated with a college or university that gives instruction in a specialized field and recommends candidates for degrees.
c. A division of an educational institution constituting several grades or classes: advanced to the upper school.
d. The student body of an educational institution.
e. The building or group of buildings housing an educational institution.
4. The process of being educated formally, especially education constituting a planned series of courses over a number of years: The children were put to school at home. What do you plan to do when you finish school?
5. A session of instruction: School will start in three weeks. He had to stay after school today.
6.
a. A group of people, especially philosophers, artists, or writers, whose thought, work, or style demonstrates a common origin or influence or unifying belief: the school of Aristotle; the Venetian school of painters.
b. A group of people distinguished by similar manners, customs, or opinions: aristocrats of the old school.
7. Close-order drill instructions or exercises for military units or personnel.
8. Australian A group of people gathered together for gambling.
tr.v. schooled, school·ing, schools
1. To educate in or as if in a school.
2. To train or discipline: She is well schooled in literature. See Synonyms at teach.
3. Slang To defeat or put down decisively, especially in a humiliating manner: Our team got schooled by the worst team in the division.
adj.
Of or relating to school or education in schools: school supplies; a school dictionary.
[Middle English scole, from Old English scōl, from Latin schola, scola, from Greek skholē; see segh- in Indo-European roots.]
school 2
(sko͞ol)
n.
A large group of aquatic animals, especially fish, swimming together; a shoal.
intr.v. schooled, school·ing, schools
To swim in or form into a school.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
school
(skuːl)
n
1. (Education)
a. an institution or building at which children and young people usually under 19 receive education
b. (as modifier): school bus; school day.
c. (in combination): schoolroom; schoolwork.
2. (Education) any educational institution or building
3. (Education) a faculty, institution, or department specializing in a particular subject: a law school.
4. (Education) the staff and pupils of a school
5. (Education) the period of instruction in a school or one session of this: he stayed after school to do extra work.
6. (Education) meetings held occasionally for members of a profession, etc
7. a place or sphere of activity that instructs: the school of hard knocks.
8. a body of people or pupils adhering to a certain set of principles, doctrines, or methods
9. (Art Terms) a group of artists, writers, etc, linked by the same style, teachers, or aims: the Venetian school of painting.
10. a style of life: a gentleman of the old school.
11. informal a group assembled for a common purpose, esp gambling or drinking
vb (tr)
12. to train or educate in or as in a school
13. to discipline or control
[Old English scōl, from Latin schola school, from Greek skholē leisure spent in the pursuit of knowledge]
school
(skuːl)
n
(Zoology) a group of porpoises or similar aquatic animals that swim together
vb
(Zoology) (intr) to form such a group
[Old English scolu shoal2]
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
school1
(skul)
n.
1. an institution for teaching persons under college age.
2. a college or university.
3. an institution or academic department for instruction in a particular skill or field.
4. a systematic program of studies: summer school.
5. the activity of teaching or of learning under instruction: No school today!
6. the body of persons belonging to an educational institution: The whole school applauded.
7. a building, room, etc., housing an academic department or institution.
8. any place, situation, etc., that instructs or indoctrinates.
9. the body of pupils or followers of a master, system, method, etc.: the Platonic school of philosophy.
10.
a. a group of artists whose works reflect a common conceptual, regional, or personal influence.
b. the art and artists of a geographical location considered independently of stylistic similarity.
11. any group of persons having common attitudes or beliefs.
adj.
12. of or connected with a school or schools.
v.t.
13. to educate in or as if in a school; teach; train.
14. Archaic. to reprimand.
[before 900; Middle English scole (n.), Old English scōl < Latin schola < Greek scholḗ leisure employed in learning]
school2
(skul)
n.
1. a large number of fish, porpoises, whales, or the like, feeding or migrating together.
v.i.
2. to form into, or go in, a school, as fish.
[1350–1400; Middle English schol(e) < Dutch school; c. Old English scolu troop; see shoal2]
Random House Kernerman Webster’s College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
School
the body of pupils in a school; a group of painters or musicians; the disciples of a teacher; a collective body of teachers; a company of thieves; a set of persons who agree on certain philosophical, scientific, or other opinions; a herd of sea mammals or fish.
Examples: school of abuse, 1579; of beggars; of bream, 1552; of card players, 1812; of clerks, 1486; of dolphins, 1615; of ducks, 1858; of experience, 1671; of fish, 1486; of gladiators, 1863; of gulls, 1894; of haddock, 1819; of hell, 1390; of herrings, 1578; of hippopotami, 1861; of oysters, 1665; of painters; of pamphlets, 1567; of patience, 1583; of patterers (thieves), 1859; of pheasants, 1592; of pickpockets; of pigeons, 1880; of pilchards, 1769; of politics, 1690; of porpoises, 1863; of scolds, 1589; of shallow coves (thieves), 1851; of smolt, 1863; of thieves, 1856; of troop of the Imperial Guard; of whales, 1585.
Dictionary of Collective Nouns and Group Terms. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
school
– university
1. used as countable nouns
In both British and American English, a school is a place where children are educated, and a university is a place where students study for degrees.
The village had a church and a school.
Heidelberg is a very old university.
2. used as uncountable nouns
In American English, school (without ‘a’ or ‘the’) is used to refer to both schools and universities. If someone is attending a school or university, Americans say that they are in school.
All the children were in school.
She is doing well in school.
When speakers of American English ask an adult ‘Where did you go to school?’, they mean ‘What college or university did you study in?’.
In British English, school refers only to schools for children. If someone is attending a school, British speakers say they are at school. If they are attending a university, British speakers say they are at university.
I was at school with Joty, but I haven’t seen her since I was 16.
She is studying medicine at university.
Collins COBUILD English Usage © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 2004, 2011, 2012
school
Past participle: schooled
Gerund: schooling
Imperative |
---|
school |
school |
Present |
---|
I school |
you school |
he/she/it schools |
we school |
you school |
they school |
Preterite |
---|
I schooled |
you schooled |
he/she/it schooled |
we schooled |
you schooled |
they schooled |
Present Continuous |
---|
I am schooling |
you are schooling |
he/she/it is schooling |
we are schooling |
you are schooling |
they are schooling |
Present Perfect |
---|
I have schooled |
you have schooled |
he/she/it has schooled |
we have schooled |
you have schooled |
they have schooled |
Past Continuous |
---|
I was schooling |
you were schooling |
he/she/it was schooling |
we were schooling |
you were schooling |
they were schooling |
Past Perfect |
---|
I had schooled |
you had schooled |
he/she/it had schooled |
we had schooled |
you had schooled |
they had schooled |
Future |
---|
I will school |
you will school |
he/she/it will school |
we will school |
you will school |
they will school |
Future Perfect |
---|
I will have schooled |
you will have schooled |
he/she/it will have schooled |
we will have schooled |
you will have schooled |
they will have schooled |
Future Continuous |
---|
I will be schooling |
you will be schooling |
he/she/it will be schooling |
we will be schooling |
you will be schooling |
they will be schooling |
Present Perfect Continuous |
---|
I have been schooling |
you have been schooling |
he/she/it has been schooling |
we have been schooling |
you have been schooling |
they have been schooling |
Future Perfect Continuous |
---|
I will have been schooling |
you will have been schooling |
he/she/it will have been schooling |
we will have been schooling |
you will have been schooling |
they will have been schooling |
Past Perfect Continuous |
---|
I had been schooling |
you had been schooling |
he/she/it had been schooling |
we had been schooling |
you had been schooling |
they had been schooling |
Conditional |
---|
I would school |
you would school |
he/she/it would school |
we would school |
you would school |
they would school |
Past Conditional |
---|
I would have schooled |
you would have schooled |
he/she/it would have schooled |
we would have schooled |
you would have schooled |
they would have schooled |
Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:
Noun | 1. | school — an educational institution; «the school was founded in 1900»
educational institution — an institution dedicated to education academy — a school for special training correspondence school — a school that teaches nonresident students by mail crammer — a special school where students are crammed dancing school — a school in which students learn to dance direct-grant school — formerly a school that charged tuition fees and also received government grants in return for admitting certain non-paying students who were nominated by the local authorities driving school — a school where people are taught to drive automobiles finishing school — a private school for girls that emphasizes training in cultural and social activities flying school — a school for teaching students to fly airplanes grad school, graduate school — a school in a university offering study leading to degrees beyond the bachelor’s degree language school — a school for teaching foreign languages nursing school, school of nursing — a school for training nurses religious school — a school run by a religious body riding school — a school where horsemanship is taught and practiced Gymnasium, lycee, lyceum, middle school, secondary school — a school for students intermediate between elementary school and college; usually grades 9 to 12 secretarial school — a school where secretarial skills (typing and shorthand and filing etc) are taught tech, technical school — a school teaching mechanical and industrial arts and the applied sciences training school — a school providing practical vocational and technical training veterinary school — a school teaching veterinary medicine conservatory — the faculty and students of a school specializing in one of the fine arts faculty, staff — the body of teachers and administrators at a school; «the dean addressed the letter to the entire staff of the university» alma mater — your alma mater is a school you graduated from public school — a tuition free school in the United States supported by taxes and controlled by a school board private school — a school established and controlled privately and supported by endowment and tuition dance school — a school where students are taught to dance day school — a school giving instruction during the daytime night school — a school that holds classes in the evenings for students who cannot attend during the day Sabbath school, Sunday school — school meeting on Sundays for religious instruction elementary school, grade school, primary school, grammar school — a school for young children; usually the first 6 or 8 grades school teacher, schoolteacher — a teacher in a school below the college level |
2. | school — a building where young people receive education; «the school was built in 1932»; «he walked to school every morning»
schoolhouse building, edifice — a structure that has a roof and walls and stands more or less permanently in one place; «there was a three-story building on the corner»; «it was an imposing edifice» classroom, schoolroom — a room in a school where lessons take place conservatoire, conservatory — a schoolhouse with special facilities for fine arts day school — a school building without boarding facilities school system — establishment including the plant and equipment for providing education from kindergarten through high school |
|
3. | school — the process of being formally educated at a school; «what will you do when you finish school?»
schooling education — the gradual process of acquiring knowledge; «education is a preparation for life»; «a girl’s education was less important than a boy’s» |
|
4. | school — a body of creative artists or writers or thinkers linked by a similar style or by similar teachers; «the Venetian school of painting»
body — a group of persons associated by some common tie or occupation and regarded as an entity; «the whole body filed out of the auditorium»; «the student body»; «administrative body» Ashcan School, Eight — a group of United States painters founded in 1907 and noted for their realistic depictions of sordid aspects of city life deconstructivism — a school of architecture based on the philosophical theory of deconstruction historical school — a school of 19th century German economists and legal philosophers who tried to explain modern economic systems in evolutionary or historical terms pointillism — a school of painters who used a technique of painting with tiny dots of pure colors that would blend in the viewer’s eye; developed by Georges Seurat and his followers late in 19th century France art nouveau — a French school of art and architecture popular in the 1890s; characterized by stylized natural forms and sinuous outlines of such objects as leaves and vines and flowers lake poets — English poets at the beginning of the 19th century who lived in the Lake District and were inspired by it secession, sezession — an Austrian school of art and architecture parallel to the French art nouveau in the 1890s |
|
5. | school — the period of instruction in a school; the time period when school is in session; «stay after school»; «he didn’t miss a single day of school»; «when the school day was done we would walk home together»
schooltime, school day period, period of time, time period — an amount of time; «a time period of 30 years»; «hastened the period of time of his recovery»; «Picasso’s blue period» study hall — a period of time during the school day that is set aside for study |
|
6. | school — an educational institution’s faculty and students; «the school keeps parents informed»; «the whole school turned out for the game»
educational institution — an institution dedicated to education |
|
7. | school — a large group of fish; «a school of small glittering fish swam by»
shoal fish — any of various mostly cold-blooded aquatic vertebrates usually having scales and breathing through gills; «the shark is a large fish»; «in the living room there was a tank of colorful fish» animal group — a group of animals |
|
Verb | 1. | school — educate in or as if in a school; «The children are schooled at great cost to their parents in private institutions»
educate — give an education to; «We must educate our youngsters better» home-school — educate (one’s children) at home instead of sending (them) to a school; «The parents are home-schooling their daughter» |
2. | school — teach or refine to be discriminative in taste or judgment; «Cultivate your musical taste»; «Train your tastebuds»; «She is well schooled in poetry»
civilise, civilize, cultivate, educate, train fine-tune, refine, polish, down — improve or perfect by pruning or polishing; «refine one’s style of writing» sophisticate — make less natural or innocent; «Their manners had sophisticated the young girls» |
|
3. | school — swim in or form a large group of fish; «A cluster of schooling fish was attracted to the bait»
swim — travel through water; «We had to swim for 20 minutes to reach the shore»; «a big fish was swimming in the tank» |
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
school
noun
2. group, set, circle, following, class, faction, followers, disciples, sect, devotees, denomination, clique, adherents, schism the Chicago school of economists
verb
1. train, prime, coach, prepare, discipline, educate, drill, tutor, instruct, verse, indoctrinate He is schooled to spot trouble.
Quotations
«School is where you go between when your parents can’t take you and industry can’t take you» [John Updike]
«A school is not a factory. Its raison d’être is to provide opportunity for experience» [J.L. Carr The Harpole Report]
Schools, colleges, and universities
academe (literary), academy, alma mater, approved school (Brit.), boarding school, choir school (Brit.), city technology college or CTC (Brit.), civic university (Brit.), classical college (Canad.), co-ed (Brit.), college, college of advanced technology or CAT, college of education, collegiate institute (Canad.), community college, community home, community school (Brit.), composite school (Canad.), comprehensive or comprehensive school (chiefly Brit.), convent or convent school, correspondence school, council school, dame school (old-fashioned), day school, direct-grant school (Brit. old-fashioned), district high school (N.Z.), elementary school (Brit. old-fashioned), finishing school, first school (Brit.), grade school (U.S.), grammar school (U.S.), Great Public Schools or GPS (Austral.), hedge-school (Irish history), hostel (Canad.), independent school, infant school, integrated school (N.Z.), intermediate school (N.Z.), Ivy League, junior college (U.S. & Canad.), junior school, kindergarten, kindy or kindie (Austral. & N.Z.), land grant university (U.S.), List D school (Scot.), magnet school, maintained school, middle school (Brit.), mixed school, multiversity (chiefly U.S. & Canad.), National School, night school, normal school, nursery or nursery school, Open College, Open University, polytechnic, preparatory school, prep school, or (chiefly U.S.) prep, primary school, private school, public school, ragged school (Brit.), reformatory or reform school, residential school, Sabbath school (chiefly U.S.), schola cantorum, secondary modern school (Brit. old-fashioned), secondary school, seminary, separate school (Canad.), single-sex school, sixth-form college, special school (Brit.), state school, summer school, Sunday school, technical college or (informal) tech (Brit.), technology college, tertiary college (Brit.), trade school, university or (informal) uni, varsity (Brit. & N.Z. informal), village college, yeshiva
Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002
school
verb
To impart knowledge and skill to:
The American Heritage® Roget’s Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
Translations
تِلْميذجامِعَه او كُلِّيَّهسِربكُلِّيَّه، قِسممَدْرَسَة
колежобучавампасажуниверситетучилище
školauniverzitafakultahejnokolej
skolestimeuniversitetafdelingfakultet
lernejo
kool
koulukoulukuntakouluttaaparviyliopisto
školasveučilištefakultet
iskola
sekolahuniversitas
skólitorfa, vaîaháskóladeildháskólinemendur
学校
학교
mokykla
apvaldītaugstskolabarsfakultātekursi
şcoală
školanaučiť sa
šolaučitifakultetapouk
јато
skolastimfakultetinstitutionlära
shule
โรงเรียน
зграяшкола
trườngtrường học
school
1 [skuːl]
school
2 [skuːl] N [of fish, dolphins, whales] → banco m
Collins Spanish Dictionary — Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005
school
[ˈskuːl]
n
(= place of education in general) → école f
to go to school → aller à l’école
at school → à l’école
(= secondary school) (up to 15) → collège m; (after 15) → lycée m
(= lessons) → école f
I’ll see you after school → Je te verrai après l’école.
School starts at 9 a.m → L’école commence à 9 heures.
School starts in October → L’école commence en octobre.
(= pupils and staff) → école f
(= privately-run establishment) (to learn specific subjects, skills) → école f
a riding school → une école d’équitation
a language school → une école de langues
(= university faculty) → faculté f
the university’s school of engineering → la faculté d’ingénierie de l’université
(= college) → école f
art school → école d’art
(US) (= university) → faculté f
modif [curriculum, subject, timetable] → scolaire; [attendance, rules, life] → scolaire; [term, outing, photo, prize] → scolaire; [dance, concert, disco, magazine, play] → de l’école; [song] → scolaire; [day, desk] → d’école; [bell, gate, building, hall, canteen] → de l’école; [band, choir, orchestra, team] → de l’école; [pupil, student, captain, prefect, caretaker, governor] → de l’école; [blazer, uniform, cap] → de l’école; [nurse] → scolaire
vt
(= train) [+ person] to be schooled in sth → être rompu(e) à qch
He’s well schooled in survival → Il est bien rompu à l’art de la survie.
to be schooled to do sth → être rompu(e) à faire qch
We are schooled to keep negative emotions inside → Nous sommes rompus à garder pour nous les émotions négatives.
BUT On nous apprend à garder pour nous les émotions négatives.
Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
school
in cpds → Schul-;
school board
n (US) → Schulbehörde f; (Brit) → Schulaufsichtsrat m
schoolboy
adj attr → Pennäler-, Schuljungen-; school prank → Pennäler- or Schuljungenstreich m; school humour or (US) humor → Pennälerhumor m
school dinner
n → Schulessen nt
school
:
schoolhouse
n (= teacher’s house) → Lehrerhaus nt; (= school) → Schulhaus nt
school
:
school-leaving age
n (Brit) → Schulabgangsalter nt, → Schulentlassungsalter nt
schoolmaster
n (dated) → Lehrer m, → Schulmeister m (dated); village school → Dorfschulleiter m, → Dorfschulmeister m (dated)
school meals
pl → Schulessen nt
schoolroom
n (in school) → Klassenzimmer nt; (in private house) → Schulzimmer nt
school run
n (Brit) die Zeit, in der Eltern ihre Kinder am Morgen zur Schule bringen und am Nachmittag wieder abholen; he’s doing the morning school this week → diese Woche bringt er die Kinder am Morgen zur Schule
school
:
school
1
school
2
Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007
school
1 [skuːl]
3. adj (year, fees) → scolastico/a
during school hours, in school time → durante l’orario scolastico
school
2 [skuːl] n (of fish) → banco
Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995
school1
(skuːl) noun
1. a place for teaching especially children. She goes to the school; He’s not at university – he’s still at school; (American) He’s still in school.
2. the pupils of a school. The behaviour of this school in public is sometimes not very good.
3. a series of meetings or a place for instruction etc. She runs a sewing school; a driving school.
4. a department of a university or college dealing with a particular subject. the School of Mathematics.
5. (American) a university or college.
6. a group of people with the same ideas etc. There are two schools of thought about the treatment of this disease.
verb
to train through practice. We must school ourselves to be patient.
ˈschoolbag noun
a bag for carrying books etc to and from school. She had a schoolbag on her back.
ˈschoolboy, ˈschoolgirl nouns
a boy or girl who goes to school.
ˈschoolchild noun – plural ˈschoolchildren –
a child who goes to school.
ˈschool-day noun
a day on which children go to school. On a school-day I get up at seven o’clock.
ˈschooldays noun plural
the time of a person’s life during which he goes to school.
ˈschoolfellow noun
a person who is or was taught at the same school, especially in the same class. I met an old schoolfellow of yours.
ˈschool-leaver noun
a school-pupil who is about to leave, or has just left, school eg because he has finished his course of education there.
ˈschoolmaster noun – feminine ˈschoolmistress –
a person who teaches in school.
ˈschoolmate noun
a schoolfellow, especially a friend.
ˈschool-teacher noun
a person who teaches in a school.
school2
(skuːl) noun
a group of certain kinds of fish, whales or other water animals swimming about. a school of porpoises.
Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.
school
→ مَدْرَسَة škola skole Schule σχολείο colegio koulu école škola scuola 学校 학교 school skole szkoła escola школа skola โรงเรียน okul trường học 学校
Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009
- Is there a ski school?
Collins Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009
school
n escuela; medical — facultad f or escuela de medicina
English-Spanish/Spanish-English Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
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educalingo
At school, there was an annual school disco and I’d be standing in my bedroom wondering what to wear for hours on end. Eventually I’d arrive at a decision that was just the most ridiculous costume you could have ever devised — I think it was probably knitted Christmas jumpers on top of buttoned-up white shirts.
Guy Berryman
ETYMOLOGY OF THE WORD SCHOOL
Old English scōl, from Latin schola school, from Greek skholē leisure spent in the pursuit of knowledge.
Etymology is the study of the origin of words and their changes in structure and significance.
PRONUNCIATION OF SCHOOL
GRAMMATICAL CATEGORY OF SCHOOL
School is a verb and can also act as a noun.
A noun is a type of word the meaning of which determines reality. Nouns provide the names for all things: people, objects, sensations, feelings, etc.
The verb is the part of the sentence that is conjugated and expresses action and state of being.
See the conjugation of the verb school in English.
WHAT DOES SCHOOL MEAN IN ENGLISH?
School
A school is an institution designed for the teaching of students under the direction of teachers. Most countries have systems of formal education, which is commonly compulsory. In these systems, students progress through a series of schools. The names for these schools vary by country but generally include primary school for young children and secondary school for teenagers who have completed primary education. An institution where higher education is taught, is commonly called a university college or university. In addition to these core schools, students in a given country may also attend schools before and after primary and secondary education. Kindergarten or pre-school provide some schooling to very young children. University, vocational school, college or seminary may be available after secondary school. A school may also be dedicated to one particular field, such as a school of economics or a school of dance. Alternative schools may provide nontraditional curriculum and methods. There are also non-government schools, called private schools. Private schools may be required when the government does not supply adequate, or special education.
Definition of school in the English dictionary
The first definition of school in the dictionary is an institution or building at which children and young people usually under 19 receive education. Other definition of school is any educational institution or building. School is also a faculty, institution, or department specializing in a particular subject.
CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO SCHOOL
PRESENT
Present
I school
you school
he/she/it schools
we school
you school
they school
Present continuous
I am schooling
you are schooling
he/she/it is schooling
we are schooling
you are schooling
they are schooling
Present perfect
I have schooled
you have schooled
he/she/it has schooled
we have schooled
you have schooled
they have schooled
Present perfect continuous
I have been schooling
you have been schooling
he/she/it has been schooling
we have been schooling
you have been schooling
they have been schooling
Present tense is used to refer to circumstances that exist at the present time or over a period that includes the present time. The present perfect refers to past events, although it can be considered to denote primarily the resulting present situation rather than the events themselves.
PAST
Past
I schooled
you schooled
he/she/it schooled
we schooled
you schooled
they schooled
Past continuous
I was schooling
you were schooling
he/she/it was schooling
we were schooling
you were schooling
they were schooling
Past perfect
I had schooled
you had schooled
he/she/it had schooled
we had schooled
you had schooled
they had schooled
Past perfect continuous
I had been schooling
you had been schooling
he/she/it had been schooling
we had been schooling
you had been schooling
they had been schooling
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will school
you will school
he/she/it will school
we will school
you will school
they will school
Future continuous
I will be schooling
you will be schooling
he/she/it will be schooling
we will be schooling
you will be schooling
they will be schooling
Future perfect
I will have schooled
you will have schooled
he/she/it will have schooled
we will have schooled
you will have schooled
they will have schooled
Future perfect continuous
I will have been schooling
you will have been schooling
he/she/it will have been schooling
we will have been schooling
you will have been schooling
they will have been schooling
The future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would school
you would school
he/she/it would school
we would school
you would school
they would school
Conditional continuous
I would be schooling
you would be schooling
he/she/it would be schooling
we would be schooling
you would be schooling
they would be schooling
Conditional perfect
I would have school
you would have school
he/she/it would have school
we would have school
you would have school
they would have school
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been schooling
you would have been schooling
he/she/it would have been schooling
we would have been schooling
you would have been schooling
they would have been schooling
Conditional or «future-in-the-past» tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you school
we let´s school
you school
The imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Present Participle
schooling
Infinitive shows the action beyond temporal perspective. The present participle or gerund shows the action during the session. The past participle shows the action after completion.
WORDS THAT RHYME WITH SCHOOL
Synonyms and antonyms of school in the English dictionary of synonyms
SYNONYMS OF «SCHOOL»
The following words have a similar or identical meaning as «school» and belong to the same grammatical category.
Translation of «school» into 25 languages
TRANSLATION OF SCHOOL
Find out the translation of school to 25 languages with our English multilingual translator.
The translations of school from English to other languages presented in this section have been obtained through automatic statistical translation; where the essential translation unit is the word «school» in English.
Translator English — Chinese
学校
1,325 millions of speakers
Translator English — Spanish
colegio
570 millions of speakers
English
school
510 millions of speakers
Translator English — Hindi
स्कूल
380 millions of speakers
Translator English — Arabic
مَدْرَسَة
280 millions of speakers
Translator English — Russian
школа
278 millions of speakers
Translator English — Portuguese
escola
270 millions of speakers
Translator English — Bengali
স্কুল
260 millions of speakers
Translator English — French
école
220 millions of speakers
Translator English — Malay
Sekolah
190 millions of speakers
Translator English — German
Schule
180 millions of speakers
Translator English — Japanese
学校
130 millions of speakers
Translator English — Korean
학교
85 millions of speakers
Translator English — Javanese
Sekolah
85 millions of speakers
Translator English — Vietnamese
trường học
80 millions of speakers
Translator English — Tamil
பள்ளி
75 millions of speakers
Translator English — Marathi
शाळा
75 millions of speakers
Translator English — Turkish
okul
70 millions of speakers
Translator English — Italian
scuola
65 millions of speakers
Translator English — Polish
szkoła
50 millions of speakers
Translator English — Ukrainian
школа
40 millions of speakers
Translator English — Romanian
școală
30 millions of speakers
Translator English — Greek
σχολείο
15 millions of speakers
Translator English — Afrikaans
skool
14 millions of speakers
Translator English — Swedish
skola
10 millions of speakers
Translator English — Norwegian
skole
5 millions of speakers
Trends of use of school
TENDENCIES OF USE OF THE TERM «SCHOOL»
The term «school» is very widely used and occupies the 637 position in our list of most widely used terms in the English dictionary.
FREQUENCY
Very widely used
The map shown above gives the frequency of use of the term «school» in the different countries.
Principal search tendencies and common uses of school
List of principal searches undertaken by users to access our English online dictionary and most widely used expressions with the word «school».
FREQUENCY OF USE OF THE TERM «SCHOOL» OVER TIME
The graph expresses the annual evolution of the frequency of use of the word «school» during the past 500 years. Its implementation is based on analysing how often the term «school» appears in digitalised printed sources in English between the year 1500 and the present day.
Examples of use in the English literature, quotes and news about school
10 QUOTES WITH «SCHOOL»
Famous quotes and sentences with the word school.
I’m a school dropout. So, at the age of 16, I moved to Mumbai to try my luck on some business.
I’ve been in show business for 50, no, 60 years. I was approached in school to join a variety act.
I was an amateur wrestler, which I loved. It was my passion, but I started really late; I was a junior in high school when I began.
I remember one day during my freshman year of high school, when as usual I was obsessively listening to a cast recording: it may have been ‘Jesus Christ Superstar.’ And I remember sitting there, totally absorbed, saying to myself, ‘I can do this.’
At school, there was an annual school disco and I’d be standing in my bedroom wondering what to wear for hours on end. Eventually I’d arrive at a decision that was just the most ridiculous costume you could have ever devised — I think it was probably knitted Christmas jumpers on top of buttoned-up white shirts.
I’ve always been really artistic. I went to an all-girls’ private Catholic school, and one of their biggest things was musical theater. I became obsessed with that.
Most executives, many scientists, and almost all business school graduates believe that if you analyze data, this will give you new ideas. Unfortunately, this belief is totally wrong. The mind can only see what it is prepared to see.
I grew up playing field hockey and lacrosse — prep school sport — and I was terrible at them.
If you’re going to have a public subsidy to education, vouchers are clearly a better way of delivering it. They should result in some loosening up and privatization of the government school system.
I was in elementary school in Mississippi, and when Katrina hit, my mom put me in home school. So ever since sixth grade, I’ve been home schooled, which was interesting.
10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «SCHOOL»
Discover the use of school in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to school and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
This text is about the form and function of the school and it is the first global review of how design and architecture have kept pace with innovation in schools in the modern period.
Catherine Burke, Ian Grosvenor, 2008
2
School: The Story of American Public Education
Published to coincide with the PBS special on public education, this collection of writings by the nation’s most renowned historians of education chronicles the story of America’s grand experiment in public education.
Sarah Mondale, Sarah B. Patton, 2002
3
Sabbath School Program Planner
Here are 14 complete scripts and 20 program starters to help you present spiritually rewarding Sabbath school programs that get people involved!
Dorothy Eaton Watts, 1997
4
Effective School Management
This book can be used as a source of reference for anyone on a school manager position, written by people who practice management on educational organizations themselves, it deals with the fundamentals of what management is the many roles …
K.B. Everard, Geoff Morris, Ian Wilson, 2004
5
Why Don’t Students Like School: A Cognitive Scientist …
This book offers you the research, and the arguments, that will help you become a more effective teacher.» —Joe Riener, English teacher, Wilson High School, Washington, D.C. Why Don’t Students Like School? now comes with online discussion …
Daniel T. Willingham, 2009
6
Art School: (propositions for the 21st Century)
Leading international artists and art educators consider the challenges of arteducation in today’s dramatically changed art world.
Steven Henry Madoff, 2009
7
School Violence: Studies in Alienation, Revenge, and Redemption
and group dialogue, previously ignored or repressed phenomena can find a place in which they can be contained and acknowledged.» —Book Jacket.
8
School Shootings: Mediatized Violence in a Global Age
In three sections, this book explores shootings from different, yet interconnected, perspectives: (1) a theoretical focus on media and school shootings within various sociological and cultural dimensions, specifically how contemporary media …
Glenn W. Muschert, Johanna Sumiala, 2012
First produced by the Atlantic Theater Company on September 30, 2009.
10
The Chicago School of Architecture: A History of Commercial …
Discusses the materials and structural techniques of this period in relation to the economic and cultural growth of Chicago and analyzes the school’s role in the development of modern architecture
10 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «SCHOOL»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term school is used in the context of the following news items.
Michelle Obama hugs pupils on visit to east London school
Michelle Obama’s visit to a girls school on Tuesday struck a chord in one of London’s most deprived areas and one with the highest proportions of Muslims. «Telegraph.co.uk, Jun 15»
Canada’s residential schools cultural genocide, Truth and …
OTTAWA—The Truth and Reconciliation Commission urges all Canadians to rise to the enormous challenge of righting the wrongs committed by residential … «Toronto Star, Jun 15»
Prison time for some Atlanta school educators in cheating scandal
(CNN) There was nothing routine about a sentencing hearing Tuesday in Atlanta that wrote the final legal chapter of one of the most massive school cheating … «CNN, Apr 15»
How Columbia Journalism School conducted this investigation
Several weeks later, the magazine contacted the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism about conducting an investigation of what had gone wrong … «Columbia Journalism Review, Apr 15»
Atlanta Educators Convicted in School Cheating Scandal
Many of the defendants — a mixture of Atlanta public school teachers, testing coordinators and administrators — were also convicted of other charges, such as … «New York Times, Apr 15»
France Crash: 16 Victims From One School
France Crash: 16 Victims From One School. The headteacher of a school which lost 16 children and two teachers in the Alps crash weeps as he pays tribute to … «Sky Showbiz, Mar 15»
Boy Excluded From School For Dressing Up As Christian Grey
Eleven-year-old Liam Scholes faced punishment at his British high school when he showed up for class dressed as the title character from Fifty Shades of Grey. «TIME, Mar 15»
School where Pakistani Taliban massacred over 130 children reopens
The horrifying terrorist attack on the Army Public School and Degree College in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar killed at least 145 people, including … «CNN, Jan 15»
Pakistan kills school massacre ‘facilitator’
Pakistani security forces have killed a Taliban commander who allegedly facilitated the Peshawar school massacre, which left 150 people dead in the country’s … «Aljazeera.com, Dec 14»
Peshawar school massacre: ‘This is Pakistan’s 9/11 – now is the …
Pakistan is mourning 148 people, mostly children, killed by the Taliban in a school massacre in Peshawar on 16 December. Photograph: A MAJEED/AFP/Getty … «The Guardian, Dec 14»
REFERENCE
« EDUCALINGO. School [online]. Available <https://educalingo.com/en/dic-en/school>. Apr 2023 ».
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Discover all that is hidden in the words on
Other forms: schools; schooled
School is the place you go to learn, and the place you escape from when you play hooky. When you school someone, it means you’ve educated or put that person in his or her place.
School has its roots in the Greek skhole. That word originally had the sense of “leisure,” which evolved into a “place for discussion,” so you can see how school came to have its modern meaning. School, as in «school of thought,» can describe a group of people bonded together by shared principles. The phrase «school of hard knocks» is slang for “rough experience in life.” School also refers to a large group of fish that swim together.
Definitions of school
-
noun
an educational institution
“the
school was founded in 1900”see moresee less-
types:
- show 58 types…
- hide 58 types…
-
academy
a school for special training
-
correspondence school
a school that teaches nonresident students by mail
-
crammer
a special school where students are crammed
-
dancing school
a school in which students learn to dance
-
direct-grant school
formerly a school that charged tuition fees and also received government grants in return for admitting certain non-paying students who were nominated by the local authorities
-
driving school
a school where people are taught to drive automobiles
-
finishing school
a private school for girls that emphasizes training in cultural and social activities
-
flying school
a school for teaching students to fly airplanes
-
grad school, graduate school
a school in a university offering study leading to degrees beyond the bachelor’s degree
-
language school
a school for teaching foreign languages
-
nursing school, school of nursing
a school for training nurses
-
religious school
a school run by a religious body
-
riding school
a school where horsemanship is taught and practiced
-
Gymnasium, lycee, lyceum, middle school, secondary school
a school for students intermediate between elementary school and college; usually grades 9 to 12
-
secretarial school
a school where secretarial skills (typing and shorthand and filing etc) are taught
-
tech, technical school
a school teaching mechanical and industrial arts and the applied sciences
-
training school
a school providing practical vocational and technical training
-
veterinary school
a school teaching veterinary medicine
-
conservatory
the faculty and students of a school specializing in one of the fine arts
-
alma mater
your alma mater is a school you graduated from
-
public school
a tuition free school in the United States supported by taxes and controlled by a school board
-
private school
a school established and controlled privately and supported by endowment and tuition
-
dance school
a school where students are taught to dance
-
day school
a school giving instruction during the daytime
-
night school
a school that holds classes in the evenings for students who cannot attend during the day
-
Sabbath school, Sunday school
school meeting on Sundays for religious instruction
-
elementary school, grade school, grammar school, primary school
a school for young children; usually the first 6 or 8 grades
-
junior school
British school for children aged 7-11
-
infant school
British school for children aged 5-7
-
yeshiva, yeshivah
an academy for the advanced study of Jewish texts (primarily the Talmud)
-
academy
a secondary school (usually private)
-
police academy
an academy for training police officers
-
military academy
an academy for training military officers
-
naval academy
an academy for training naval officers
-
air force academy
an academy for training air force officers
-
Plato’s Academy
a school established by Plato in ancient Athens
-
business school
a graduate school offering study leading to a degree of Master in Business Administration
-
dental school, school of dentistry
a graduate school offering study leading to degrees in dentistry
-
law school, school of law
a graduate school offering study leading to a law degree
-
madrasa, madrasah
a Muslim college, university, or school
-
medical school, school of medicine
a graduate school offering study leading to a medical degree
-
music school, school of music
a school for the study of music
-
pesantran, pesantren
a Muslim school in Indonesia operated by religious leaders; produces young militants skilled in jihad
-
church school, parochial school
a private religious school run by a church or parish
-
seminary
a private place of education for the young
-
seminary
a theological school for training ministers or priests or rabbis
-
engineering school, polytechnic, polytechnic institute
a technical school offering instruction in many industrial arts and applied sciences
-
trade school, vocational school
a secondary school teaching the skilled trades
-
high, high school, highschool, senior high, senior high school
a public secondary school usually including grades 9 through 12
-
junior high, junior high school
a secondary school usually including 7th and 8th grades
-
prep school, preparatory school
a private secondary school
-
charter school
an experimental public school for kindergarten through grade 12; created and organized by teachers and parents and community leaders; operates independently of other schools
-
public school
private independent secondary school in Great Britain supported by endowment and tuition
-
day school
a private school taking day students only
-
boarding school
a private school where students are lodged and fed as well as taught
-
grammar school
a secondary school emphasizing Latin and Greek in preparation for college
-
secondary modern school
a former British secondary school emphasizing practical rather than academic education
-
composite school, comprehensive school
a large British or Canadian secondary school for children of all abilities
-
type of:
-
educational institution
an institution dedicated to education
-
noun
a building where young people receive education
“the
school was built in 1932”“he walked to
school every morning”-
synonyms:
schoolhouse
-
noun
an educational institution’s faculty and students
“the
school keeps parents informed”“the whole
school turned out for the game” -
noun
the process of being formally educated at a school
“what will you do when you finish
school?”-
synonyms:
schooling
-
noun
the period of instruction in a school; the time period when school is in session
“stay after
school”“he didn’t miss a single day of
school”“when the
school day was done we would walk home together”-
synonyms:
school day, schooltime
-
verb
educate in or as if in a school
“The children are
schooled at great cost to their parents in private institutions” -
verb
teach or refine to be discriminative in taste or judgment
“She is well
schooled in poetry”-
synonyms:
civilise, civilize, cultivate, educate, train
-
noun
a body of creative artists or writers or thinkers linked by a similar style or by similar teachers
“the Venetian
school of painting”see moresee less-
types:
- show 7 types…
- hide 7 types…
-
Ashcan School, Eight
a group of United States painters founded in 1907 and noted for their realistic depictions of sordid aspects of city life
-
deconstructivism
a school of architecture based on the philosophical theory of deconstruction
-
historical school
a school of 19th century German economists and legal philosophers who tried to explain modern economic systems in evolutionary or historical terms
-
pointillism
a school of painters who used a technique of painting with tiny dots of pure colors that would blend in the viewer’s eye; developed by Georges Seurat and his followers late in 19th century France
-
art nouveau
a French school of art and architecture popular in the 1890s; characterized by stylized natural forms and sinuous outlines of such objects as leaves and vines and flowers
-
lake poets
English poets at the beginning of the 19th century who lived in the Lake District and were inspired by it
-
secession, sezession
an Austrian school of art and architecture parallel to the French art nouveau in the 1890s
-
type of:
-
body
a group of persons associated by some common tie or occupation and regarded as an entity
-
noun
a large group of fish
“a
school of small glittering fish swam by”-
synonyms:
shoal
-
verb
swim in or form a large group of fish
“A cluster of
schooling fish was attracted to the bait”
DISCLAIMER: These example sentences appear in various news sources and books to reflect the usage of the word ‘school’.
Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Vocabulary.com or its editors.
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- Top Definitions
- Quiz
- Related Content
- Examples
- British
- Idioms And Phrases
This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.
This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.
noun
an institution where instruction is given, especially to persons under college age: The children are at school.
an institution for instruction in a particular skill or field.
a college or university.
a regular course of meetings of a teacher or teachers and students for instruction; program of instruction: summer school.
a session of such a course: no school today; to be kept after school.
the activity or process of learning under instruction, especially at a school for the young: As a child, I never liked school.
one’s formal education: They plan to be married when he finishes school.
a building housing a school.
the body of students, or students and teachers, belonging to an educational institution: The entire school rose when the principal entered the auditorium.
a building, room, etc., in a university, set apart for the use of one of the faculties or for some particular purpose: the school of agriculture.
a particular faculty or department of a university having the right to recommend candidates for degrees, and usually beginning its program of instruction after the student has completed general education: medical school.
any place, situation, etc., tending to teach anything.
the body of pupils or followers of a master, system, method, etc.: the Platonic school of philosophy.
Art.
- a group of artists, as painters, writers, or musicians, whose works reflect a common conceptual, regional, or personal influence: the modern school; the Florentine school.
- the art and artists of a geographical location considered independently of stylistic similarity: the French school.
any group of persons having common attitudes or beliefs.
Military, Navy. parts of close-order drill applying to the individual (school of the soldier ), the squad (school of the squad ), or the like.
Australian and New Zealand Informal. a group of people gathered together, especially for gambling or drinking.
schools, Archaic. the faculties of a university.
Obsolete. the schoolmen in a medieval university.
adjective
of or connected with a school or schools.
verb (used with object)
to educate in or as if in a school; teach; train.
Archaic. to reprimand.
VIDEO FOR SCHOOL
Help Students Prepare For Back-To-School With These Questions
This teacher gets real tired of saying the same words over and over. So, she came up with these helpful lists of synonyms to encourage just a little amount of participation during that time of year she calls the back-to-school blues.
MORE VIDEOS FROM DICTIONARY.COM
QUIZ
CAN YOU ANSWER THESE COMMON GRAMMAR DEBATES?
There are grammar debates that never die; and the ones highlighted in the questions in this quiz are sure to rile everyone up once again. Do you know how to answer the questions that cause some of the greatest grammar debates?
Which sentence is correct?
Idioms about school
Origin of school
1
First recorded before 900; Middle English noun scol(e), schole, Old English scōl, scolu, from Latin schola, from Greek scholḗ “leisure employed in learning”
OTHER WORDS FROM school
school·a·ble, adjectiveschool·less, adjectiveschool·like, adjective
Words nearby school
Schomburg, Schönbein, Schönberg, Schöne Müllerin, Die, Schongauer, school, school age, school attendance officer, schoolbag, school board, schoolbook
Other definitions for school (2 of 2)
noun
a large number of fish, porpoises, whales, or the like, feeding or migrating together.
verb (used without object)
to form into, or go in, a school, as fish.
Origin of school
2
First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English schol(e), sculle, from Middle Dutch schōle “flock (of animals),” Dutch school “shoal (of fish)”; cognate with Old English scolu “troop”; see shoal2
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Words related to school
academy, department, faculty, hall, institute, institution, seminary, university, class, group, party, educate, tutor, college, discipline, establishment, schoolhouse, adherents, circle, clique
How to use school in a sentence
-
They are great at expanding access, allowing teachers and schools to reach more students than ever before.
-
Once the class had started, the school should have committed to letting the students finish what they started, they both said.
-
All school reopening plans could depend on whether San Diego County ends up back on the state monitoring watch list.
-
I ran that comment by LaWana Richmond, who is running for school board to represent the subdistrict that includes Lincoln High.
-
The school also pledged to try to make it work in the fourth quarter of the year after it recruited more students in the meantime.
-
Although Huckabee’s condescending tone — like that of an elementary school history teacher — makes it difficult to take seriously.
-
A passing off-duty school safety officer named Fred Lucas said that he had been told the man was a drug dealer.
-
And then I did teachers all throughout elementary school and junior high for my friends.
-
Author J.K. Rowling says all religions are present at her beloved wizard school—except Wiccans.
-
One was a Quaker school, whose name he can no longer recall, in upstate New York.
-
All my musical studies till now have been a mere going to school, a preparation for him.
-
I ask for half a dozen projectors or so in every school, and for a well-stocked storehouse of films.
-
He was the most distinguished representative of the English school of composition, and was knighted in 1842.
-
Y was a Youth, that did not love school; Z was a Zany, a poor harmless fool.
-
The child who has got languages from its governess, therefore, marks time—that is to say, wastes time in these subjects at school.
British Dictionary definitions for school (1 of 2)
noun
- an institution or building at which children and young people usually under 19 receive education
- (as modifier)school bus; school day
- (in combination)schoolroom; schoolwork
any educational institution or building
a faculty, institution, or department specializing in a particular subjecta law school
the staff and pupils of a school
the period of instruction in a school or one session of thishe stayed after school to do extra work
meetings held occasionally for members of a profession, etc
a place or sphere of activity that instructsthe school of hard knocks
a body of people or pupils adhering to a certain set of principles, doctrines, or methods
a group of artists, writers, etc, linked by the same style, teachers, or aimsthe Venetian school of painting
a style of lifea gentleman of the old school
informal a group assembled for a common purpose, esp gambling or drinking
verb (tr)
to train or educate in or as in a school
to discipline or control
Word Origin for school
Old English scōl, from Latin schola school, from Greek skholē leisure spent in the pursuit of knowledge
British Dictionary definitions for school (2 of 2)
noun
a group of porpoises or similar aquatic animals that swim together
verb
(intr) to form such a group
Word Origin for school
Old English scolu shoal ²
Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Other Idioms and Phrases with school
In addition to the idiom beginning with school
- school of hard knocks
also see:
- tell tales (out of school)
The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
English[edit]
Pronunciation[edit]
- enPR: sko͞ol, IPA(key): /skuːl/
- (General Australian) IPA(key): /skuːɫ/
-
Audio (Received Pronunciation) (file) - Rhymes: -uːl
Etymology 1[edit]
From Middle English scole, from Old English scōl (“place of education”), from Proto-West Germanic *skōlā, from Late Latin schola, scola (“learned discussion or dissertation, lecture, school”), from Ancient Greek σχολεῖον (skholeîon), from σχολή (skholḗ, “spare time, leisure”), from Proto-Indo-European *seǵʰ- (“to hold, have, possess”). Doublet of schola and shul.
Compare Old Frisian skūle, schūle (“school”) (West Frisian skoalle, Saterland Frisian Skoule), Dutch school (“school”), German Low German School (“school”), Old High German scuola (“school”), German Schule (“school”), Bavarian Schui (“school”), Old Norse skóli (“school”).
Influenced in some senses by Middle English schole (“group of persons, host, company”), from Middle Dutch scole (“multitude, troop, band”). See school1. Related also to Old High German sigi (German Sieg, “victory”), Old English siġe, sigor (“victory”).
Alternative forms[edit]
- schole (obsolete)
Noun[edit]
school (countable and uncountable, plural schools)
- (Canada, US) An institution dedicated to teaching and learning; an educational institution.
-
Our children attend a public school in our neighborhood.
-
Harvard University is a famous American postsecondary school.
- Synonyms: academy, college, university
-
- (Britain) An educational institution providing primary and secondary education, prior to tertiary education (college or university).
-
2013 July 19, Mark Tran, “Denied an education by war”, in The Guardian Weekly, volume 189, number 6, page 1:
-
One particularly damaging, but often ignored, effect of conflict on education is the proliferation of attacks on schools […] as children, teachers or school buildings become the targets of attacks. Parents fear sending their children to school. Girls are particularly vulnerable to sexual violence.
-
-
- (UK) At Eton College, a period or session of teaching.
-
Divinity, history and geography are studied for two schools per week.
-
- Within a larger educational institution, an organizational unit, such as a department or institute, which is dedicated to a specific subject area.
-
We are enrolled in the same university, but I attend the School of Economics and my brother is in the School of Music.
- Synonyms: college, department, faculty, institute
-
- An art movement, a community of artists.
-
The Barbizon school of painters were part of an art movement towards Realism in art, which arose in the context of the dominant Romantic movement of the time.
-
- (considered collectively) The followers of a particular doctrine; a particular way of thinking or particular doctrine; a school of thought.
-
1963, Margery Allingham, chapter 3, in The China Governess[1]:
-
Here the stripped panelling was warmly gold and the pictures, mostly of the English school, were mellow and gentle in the afternoon light.
-
-
These economists belong to the monetarist school.
- 1660, Jeremy Taylor, The Worthy Communicant; or a Discourse of the Nature, Effects, and Blessings consequent to the worthy receiving of the Lords Supper
- Let no man be less confident in his faith […] by reason of any difference of judgment , which is in the several schools of Christians.
-
- The time during which classes are attended or in session in an educational institution.
-
I’ll see you after school.
-
- The room or hall in English universities where the examinations for degrees and honours are held.
- The canons, precepts, or body of opinion or practice, sanctioned by the authority of a particular class or age.
- He was a gentleman of the old school.
- 1883, Arthur Sherburne Hardy, But Yet a Woman
- His face pale but striking, though not handsome after the schools.
- An establishment offering specialized instruction, as for driving, cooking, typing, coding, etc.
Hyponyms[edit]
- See also Thesaurus:school
Coordinate terms[edit]
- (institution providing primary and secondary education): nursery school, kindergarten, college, polytechnic, university
Derived terms[edit]
- boarding school
- comprehensive school
- cram school
- elementary school
- grade school
- grammar school
- high school
- home school
- infant school
- junior high school
- junior school
- lower school
- magnet school
- middle school
- new school
- non-school, nonschool
- nursery school
- old school
- prep school
- primary school
- private school
- public school
- real school
- school age
- school band
- school holidays
- school night
- school of thought
- school trip
- school year, schoolyear
- schoolbag
- schoolbook
- schoolboy
- schoolchild
- schoolday, school day
- schoolfellow
- schoolfriend
- schoolgirl
- schoolground
- schoolkid
- schoolma’am
- schoolmaster
- schoolmistress
- school’s out
- schoolteacher
- schoolwork
- secondary modern school
- secondary school
- skoo’
- state school
- Sunday school
- tell tales out of school
- upper school
Descendants[edit]
- Bislama: skul
- Kriol: skul
- Nigerian Pidgin: skul
- Tok Pisin: skul, sikul
- Pijin: skul
- → Afar: iskool
- → Assamese: স্কুল (skul)
- → Bengali: স্কুল (śkul)
- → Dura: स्कूल
- → East Futuna: sekolā
- → Hindi: स्कूल (skūl)
- → Maori: kura
- → Nepali: स्कुल (skul)
- → Punjabi: ਸਕੂਲ (sakūl)
- → Swahili: skule, skuli
- → Urdu: اسکول
- → Yup’ik: eskuulaq
Translations[edit]
an institution dedicated to teaching and learning
- Abkhaz: апхьарта (apʼxʲartʼa)
- Adyghe: еджапӏэ (jedžaapʼe)
- Afrikaans: skool (af)
- Albanian: mësonjëtore (sq) f, shkollë (sq) f
- Ambonese Malay: iskola, skola
- American Sign Language: OpenB@Palm-PalmDown-OpenB@CenterChesthigh-PalmUp Contact Contact
- Amharic: ትምህርት ቤት (təmhrtə bet)
- Arabic: مَدْرَسَة (ar) f (madrasa), مَكْتَب (ar) m (maktab) (historical)
- Egyptian Arabic: مدرسة f (madrasa)
- Gulf Arabic: مدرسة f (madrisa)
- Aramaic:
- Syriac: ܡܕܪܫܬܐ f (maḏreštāʾ)
- Armenian: դպրոց (hy) (dprocʿ)
- Aromanian: sculii f, sculie f
- Assamese: পঢ়াশালি (porhaxali), স্কুল (skul), বিদ্যালয় (biddaloy), ছাতৰশালি (satorxali)
- Asturian: escuela (ast) f
- Atong (India): skul
- Avar: школа (škola)
- Azerbaijani: məktəb (az), mədrəsə (az) (Islamic or South Azerbaijani)
- Baluchi: وانگ جاہ (wánag jáh), (rare) وانتجاہ (wántjáh)
- Bashkir: мәктәп (mäktäp), мәҙрәсә (mäðräsä) (Islamic)
- Basque: eskola (eu), ikastola (eu), ikastetxe (eu)
- Belarusian: шко́ла f (škóla), вучы́лішча n (vučýlišča)
- Bella Coola: acwsalcta
- Bengali: মকতব (bn) (mokotob), বিদ্যালয় (biddalôy), মাদ্রাসা (bn) (madrasa) (Islamic), পাঠশালা (paṭhśala), স্কুল (bn) (śkul), ইস্কুল (bn) (iśkul)
- Breton: skol (br) f
- Brunei Bisaya: sakulah
- Brunei Malay: sikulah
- Bulgarian: учи́лище (bg) n (učílište), шко́ла (bg) f (škóla)(specialised, e.g. music, language school)
- Burmese: ကျောင်း (my) (kyaung:)
- Buryat: һургуули (hurguuli)
- Catalan: escola (ca) f
- Central Dusun: sikul
- Central Melanau: sekul
- Chechen: школа (škola), ишкол (iškol)
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 學校/学校 (hok6 haau6)
- Dungan: щүәщё (xüəxi͡o), щүәтон (xüəton)
- Hakka: 學校/学校 (ho̍k-káu)
- Mandarin: 學校/学校 (zh) (xuéxiào), 學堂/学堂 (zh) (xuétáng) (dialectal)
- Min Dong: 學校/学校 (hŏk-hâu)
- Min Nan: 學校/学校 (zh-min-nan) (ha̍k-hāu)
- Chukchi: каԓеткоран (kaḷetkoran)
- Chuvash: шкул (škul)
- Coptic: ⲁⲛⲥⲏⲃⲉ (ansēbe) (Sahidic), ⲁⲛⲍⲏⲃ (anzēb) (Bohairic)
- Crimean Tatar: mektep
- Czech: škola (cs) f
- Danish: skole (da)
- Dargwa: ушкул (uškul)
- Dhivehi: ސްކޫލު (skūlu)
- Dutch: school (nl) f
- Egyptian: (ꜥt sbꜣw)
- Elfdalian: skaule m
- Erzya: тонавтыкудо (tonavtikudo)
- Esperanto: lernejo (eo)
- Estonian: kool (et)
- Ewe: suku
- Faroese: skúli (fo) m
- Finnish: koulu (fi)
- French: école (fr) f, collège (fr) m
- Fula:
-
- Adlam script: 𞤶𞤢𞤲𞥆𞤺𞤪𞤣𞤫, 𞤣𞤵𞤯𞤢𞤤
- Latin script: janngirde, duɗal
- Friulian: scuele f
- Galician: escola (gl) f, colexio (gl) m
- Gamilaraay: dhiirrabaa
- Georgian: სკოლა (ka) (sḳola)
- German: Schule (de) f
- Greek: σχολείο (el) n (scholeío)
- Ancient: διδασκαλεῖον n (didaskaleîon)
- Greenlandic: atuarfik
- Gujarati: નિશાળ f (niśāḷ), વિદ્યાલય (vidyālya)
- Haitian Creole: lekòl
- Hebrew: בֵּית סֵפֶר (he) m (bet séfer)
- Hindi: विद्यालय (hi) m (vidyālay), स्कूल (hi) m (skūl), मद्रसा m (madrasā) (Islamic), पाठशाला (hi) f (pāṭhśālā)
- Hungarian: iskola (hu)
- Hunsrik: Schul f, xuul f
- Iban: sekula
- Icelandic: skóli (is) m
- Ido: skolo (io)
- Indonesian: sekolah (id)
- Ingrian: škoulu, oppi
- Interlingua: schola (ia)
- Irish: scoil (ga) f
- Italian: scuola (it) f
- Japanese: 学校 (ja) (がっこう, gakkō), 学び舎 (まなびや, manabiya)
- Javanese: ꦱꦼꦏꦺꦴꦭꦃ (jv) (sêkolah)
- Judeo-Italian: scuola, סשוולא
- Kalmyk: школ (shkol)
- Kannada: ಶಾಲೆ (kn) (śāle), ವಿದ್ಯಾಲಯ (kn) (vidyālaya)
- Kapampangan: pipágarálan, iskuela
- Kashubian: szkòła f
- Kazakh: мектеп (kk) (mektep), медресе (medrese) (Islamic)
- Khmer: សាលារៀន (km) (saalaa riən)
- Korean: 학교(學校) (ko) (hakgyo)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: مهکتهب (ckb) (mekteb), قوتابخانه (ckb) (qutabxane)
- Northern Kurdish: dibistan (ku) f, fêrgeh (ku) f, xwendingeh (ku) f, qutabxane (ku) f, medrese (ku) f, mekteb (ku) f, perwerdegeh (ku) f
- Kyrgyz: мектеп (ky) (mektep), медресе (medrese) (Islamic)
- Ladin: scola f
- Ladino: skola f, סקולה f
- Lao: ໂຮງຮຽນ (lo) (hōng hīan)
- Latin: collēgium n, lūdus (la) m, schola f, audītōrium n
- Latvian: skola (lv) f
- Lithuanian: mokykla (lt) f
- Lombard: scola (lmo) f, scöla f, scöra f
- Louisiana Creole French: lékòl
- Lushootseed: ʔugʷusaɬalʔtxʷ
- Luxembourgish: Schoul (lb) f
- Lü: ᦷᦣᧂᦵᦣᧃ (honghen), ᦷᦣᧂᦉᦸᧃ (hongṡoan)
- Macedonian: училиште (mk) n (učilište), школа (mk) f (škola), школо n (školo)
- Malagasy: sekoly (mg)
- Malay: sekolah (ms), maktab, madrasah (ms) (Islamic)
- Malayalam: വിദ്യാലയം (ml) (vidyālayaṃ)
- Maltese: skola (mt)
- Manchu: ᡨᠠᠴᡳᡴᡡ (tacikū)
- Manx: scoill m
- Maori: kura (mi), wharekura
- Marathi: शाळा (mr) f (śāḷā)
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: сургууль (mn) (surguulʹ)
- Mòcheno: schual f
- Navajo: óltaʼ
- Neapolitan: scola f
- Nepali: इस्कुल (iskul)
- Norman: êcole f (Jersey)
- North Frisian: Skuul c
- Northern Sami: skuvla
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: skole (no) m
- Nynorsk: skule m, skole m
- Occitan: escòla (oc) f
- Old English: scōl f
- Old Irish: scol f
- Old Prussian: skūli f
- Oriya: ବିଦ୍ୟାଳୟ (or) (bidyaḷôyô)
- Oromo: mana barumsaa
- Ossetian: скъола (sk’ola)
- Papiamentu: skol
- Pashto: ښوونځی (ps) m (xowanjai), مدرسه f (madrasá)
- Persian: مدرسه (fa) (madrese), مکتب (fa) (maktab), دبستان (fa) (dabestân)
- Piedmontese: scòla f
- Pite Sami: skåvvlå
- Plautdietsch: School f
- Polish: szkoła (pl) f, buda (pl) f (colloquial)
- Portuguese: escola (pt) f, colégio (pt) m
- Punjabi: ਮਦਰੱਸਾ m (madrasā), ਸਕੂਲ (pa) m (sakūl)
- Quechua: yachay wasi
- Romagnol: scöla f
- Romanian: școală (ro) f
- Romansch: scola f, scoula f
- Russian: шко́ла (ru) f (škóla), учи́лище (ru) n (učílišče) (specialized school, college)
- Rusyn: шко́ла f (škóla)
- Samogitian: muokīkla f
- Sanskrit: विद्यालय (sa) m (vidyālaya)
- Santali: ᱵᱤᱨᱫᱟᱹᱜᱟᱲ (birdăgaṛ)
- Sardinian: isciola f, iscola f, scola f
- Saterland Frisian: Skoule f
- Scots: skuil, schuil
- Scottish Gaelic: sgoil f
- Semai: sekulah
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: шко̑ла f, медрѐса f (Islamic)
- Roman: škȏla (sh) f, medrèsa (sh) f (Islamic)
- Sicilian: scola (scn) f
- Sindhi: اِسڪوُلُ (iskūlu)
- Sinhalese: ඉස්කෝලය (si) (iskōlaya), පාසැල (pāsæla)
- Skolt Sami: škooul
- Slovak: škola (sk) f
- Slovene: šola (sl) f
- Somali: duqsi (so), iskuul
- Sorbian:
- Lower Sorbian: šula f
- Upper Sorbian: šula f
- Sotho: sekolo (st)
- Spanish: escuela (es) f, colegio (es) m
- Swahili: shule (sw)
- Swedish: skola (sv)
- Sylheti: ꠁꠍ꠆ꠇꠥꠟ (iskul)
- Tabasaran: мектеб (mekteb)
- Tagalog: eskuwelahan, paaralan (tl) n
- Tajik: мактаб (tg) (maktab), мадраса (tg) (madrasa)
- Tamil: பள்ளி (ta) (paḷḷi), பாடசாலை (ta) (pāṭacālai)
- Tatar: мәктәп (tt) (mäktäp), мәдрәсә (tt) (mädräsä) (Islamic)
- Telugu: బడి (te) (baḍi), పాఠశాల (te) (pāṭhaśāla), విద్యాలయం (te) (vidyālayaṁ)
- Tetum: eskola
- Thai: โรงเรียน (th) (roong-riian)
- Tibetan: སློབ་གྲྭ (slob grwa)
- Tigrinya: ቤት-ትምህርቲ (bet-təmhərti)
- Tok Pisin: skul
- Turkish: okul (tr)
- Turkmen: mekdep, uçilişşe, medrese (Islamic)
- Tutong: sekula
- Ukrainian: шко́ла (uk) f (škóla), учи́лище n (učýlyšče)
- Urdu: اسکول m (iskūl), مدرسہ m (madrasa), مکتب (maktab), درس گاہ (dars gāh), تعلیم گاہ (tālīm gāh), دبستان (dabistān), تعلیمی ادارہ m (tālīmi idāra)
- Uyghur: مەكتەپ (mektep)
- Uzbek: shkola, maktab (uz), madrasa (uz) (Islamic)
- Venetian: scoła f, scola (vec) f
- Vietnamese: trường (vi) (場), trường học (vi) (場學)
- Vilamovian: śül
- Volapük: jul (vo), (lower (primary)) donajul
- Walloon: scole (wa) f
- Welsh: ysgol (cy) f
- Western Panjabi: سکول (pnb) m
- Wutunhua: xaitang
- Yagnobi: мактаб (maktab)
- Yakut: оскуола (oskuola)
- Yiddish: שולע f (shule), שול f (shul)
- Yup’ik: eskuulaq, elitnaurvik
- Zazaki: mektev
- Zhuang: yozyau, hagdangz, ranzhag, sawfuengz
an institution dedicated to teaching and learning before college or university
- American Sign Language: OpenB@Palm-PalmDown-OpenB@CenterChesthigh-PalmUp Contact Contact
- Armenian: դպրոց (hy) (dprocʿ)
- Assamese: পঢ়াশালি (porhaxali), স্কুল (skul), বিদ্যালয় (biddaloy), ছাতৰশালি (satorxali)
- Bashkir: мәктәп (mäktäp)
- Bulgarian: училище (bg) n (učilište)
- Chinese:
- Dungan: щүәщё (xüəxi͡o)
- Hakka: 學校/学校 (ho̍k-káu)
- Mandarin: 學校/学校 (zh) (xuéxiào)
- Min Dong: 學校/学校 (hŏk-hâu)
- Dutch: school (nl)
- Finnish: koulu (fi)
- Galician: colexio (gl) m, escola (gl) f
- Greek: σχολείο (el) n (scholeío)
- Indonesian: sekolah (id)
- Ingrian: škoulu, oppi
- Japanese: 学校 (ja) (がっこう, gakkō)
- Javanese: ꦱꦼꦏꦺꦴꦭꦃ (jv) (sêkolah)
- Khmer: សាលារៀន (km) (sala rean)
- Korean: 중등학교(中等學校) (jungdeunghakgyo)
- Lao: ໂຮງຮຽນ (lo) (hōng hīan)
- Latvian: skola (lv) f
- Malay: sekolah (ms)
- Maori: kura (mi)
- Marathi: शाळा (mr) f (śāḷā)
- Pashto: ښوونځی (ps) m (xowanjai)
- Persian: مدرسه (fa) (madrese)
- Polish: szkoła (pl) f
- Portuguese: escola (pt) f
- Quechua: yachay wasi
- Romanian: școală medie (ro) f, gimnaziu (ro)
- Russian: шко́ла (ru) f (škóla)
- Santali: ᱵᱤᱨᱫᱟᱹᱜᱟᱲ (birdăgaṛ)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: шко̑ла f
- Roman: škȏla (sh) f
- Sindhi: اسڪول (iskūlu)
- Spanish: escuela (es) f
- Swahili: shule (sw)
- Swedish: skola (sv) c
- Tagalog: eskuwelahan, paaralan (tl)
- Turkish: okul (tr)
- Ukrainian: шко́ла (uk) f (škóla)
- Urdu: مکتب (maktab)
- Yup’ik: eskuulaq
college or university
- Afrikaans: kollege, universiteit (af)
- American Sign Language: OpenB@Palm-PalmDown-OpenB@CenterChesthigh-PalmUp CirclesVert OpenB@CenterSternumHigh-PalmDown-OpenB@CenterChesthigh-PalmUp
- Arabic: كُلِّيَّة (ar) f (kulliyya), جَامِعَة (ar) f (jāmiʕa)
- Armenian: բուհ (hy) (buh)
- Breton: skol-veur f
- Bulgarian: коле́ж (bg) m (koléž), университе́т m (universitét)
- Burmese: တက္ကသိုလ် (my) (takka.suil)
- Catalan: escola (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 大學/大学 (yue) (daai6 hok6)
- Dungan: дащүә (daxüə)
- Mandarin: 學校/学校 (zh) (xuéxiào), 大學/大学 (zh) (dàxué)
- Min Dong: 大學/大学 (dâi-hŏk)
- Min Nan: 大學/大学 (zh-min-nan) (tāi-ha̍k)
- Czech: škola (cs) f
- Danish: skole (da) c
- Dutch: school (nl) f, universiteit (nl) f
- Estonian: kool (et)
- Finnish: yliopisto (fi)
- French: collège (fr) m, université (fr) f, faculté (fr)
- Galician: universidade (gl) f, faculdade (gl) f, colexio universitario m
- German: Universität (de) f, Hochschule (de) f
- Greek: πανεπιστήμιο (el) n (panepistímio)
- Hebrew: אוּנִיבֶרְסִיטָה (he) f (univérsita), מִכְלָלָה (he) f (mikhlalá)
- Hungarian: egyetem (hu) (university), főiskola (hu) (college)
- Ido: skolo (io)
- Indonesian: universitas (id)
- Interlingua: schola (ia)
- Irish: scoil (ga)
- Italian: università (it) f, facoltà (it)
- Japanese: 大学 (ja) (だいがく, daigaku), 学校 (ja) (がっこう, gakkō)
- Korean: (College) 대학(大學) (ko) (daehak), (University) 대학교(大學校) (ko) (daehakgyo)
- Latin: collēgium n, ūniversitās f
- Lithuanian: mokykla (lt) f
- Malay: kolej, universiti (ms)
- Maltese: università (mt), istitut, kulleġġ
- Marathi: महाविद्यालय (mr) n (mahāvidyālay)
- Northern Sami: allaskuvla
- Polish: uczelnia (pl) f, szkoła (pl) f
- Portuguese: universidade (pt) f, faculdade (pt)
- Romanian: școală superiară f, universitate (ro) f, facultate (ro) f, colegiu (ro) n
- Russian: вы́сшая шко́ла (ru) f (výsšaja škóla), вы́сшее уче́бное заведе́ние (ru) n (výsšeje učébnoje zavedénije), университе́т (ru) m (universitét), акаде́мия (ru) f (akadémija), институ́т (ru) m (institút), консервато́рия (ru) f (konservatórija), колле́дж (ru) m (kollédž), те́хникум (ru) m (téxnikum), учи́лище (ru) n (učílišče)
- Scottish Gaelic: sgoil
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: факу̀лте̄т m, академија f, колеџ m (college), универзитет m (university), свеу̀чилӣште
- Roman: fakùltēt (sh) m, akademija (sh) f, koledž (sh) m (college), univerzitet (sh) m (university), sveùčilīšte (sh) n
- Sindhi: ڪاليج
- Slovak: škola (sk) f
- Spanish: universidad (es) f, facultad (es) f
- Swahili: shule (sw)
- Swedish: högskola (sv) (college), universitet (sv) (university), lärosäte (sv)
- Tagalog: pamantasan (tl) n
- Telugu: పాఠశాల (te) (pāṭhaśāla), విద్యాలయం (te) (vidyālayaṁ)
- Thai: วิทยาลัย (th) (wít-tá-yaa-lai)
- Turkish: üniversite (tr)
- Ukrainian: ви́ща шко́ла f (výšča škóla), ви́щий навча́льний за́клад m (výščyj navčálʹnyj základ), університе́т (uk) m (universytét), акаде́мія (uk) f (akadémija), інститу́т m (instytút), консервато́рія f (konservatórija), коле́дж m (kolédž), те́хнікум m (téxnikum), учи́лище n (učýlyšče)
- Vietnamese: trường (vi) (場), đại học (vi) (大學), trường đại học (vi) (場學)
- Welsh: ysgol (cy) f
- Western Panjabi: یونیورسٹی (pnb)
a department/institute at a college or university
- Afrikaans: departement (af)
- Arabic: قِسِم m (qisim)
- Armenian: ֆակուլտետ (hy) (fakultet)
- Breton: kevrenn f
- Bulgarian: факултет (bg) m (fakultet)
- Catalan: escola (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 學校/学校 (zh) (xuéxiào)
- Czech: škola (cs) f
- Danish: skole (da) c
- Dutch: school (nl) f
- Estonian: kool (et)
- Finnish: koulu (fi)
- French: école (fr) f
- Galician: faculdade (gl) f
- German: Schule (de) f, Fakultät (de)
- Greek: σχολή (el) f (scholí)
- Hebrew: בֵּית סֵפֶר (he) m (bet séfer), פָקוּלְטָה (he) f (fakúlta)
- Hungarian: kar (hu), intézet (hu), fakultás (hu)
- Ido: skolo (io)
- Indonesian: fakultas (id)
- Interlingua: schola (ia)
- Irish: scoil (ga)
- Italian: facoltà (it) f
- Japanese: 大学 (ja) (だいがく, daigaku), 学校 (ja) (がっこう, gakkō)
- Korean: 학과(學科) (ko) (hakgwa)
- Lithuanian: mokykla (lt) f
- Malay: fakulti
- Norwegian: fakultet n
- Polish: szkoła (pl) f
- Portuguese: faculdade (pt) f
- Romanian: școală (ro) f
- Russian: ка́федра (ru) f (káfedra), факульте́т (ru) m (fakulʹtét)
- Scottish Gaelic: sgoil
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: ка̀те̄дра f, факу̀лте̄т m, шко̑ла f
- Roman: kàtēdra (sh) f, fakùltēt (sh) m, škȏla (sh) f
- Slovak: škola (sk) f
- Spanish: facultad (es) f
- Swahili: shule (sw)
- Swedish: fakultet (sv), institution (sv)
- Tagalog: pakultad, departamento, sangay, institusyon, kagawaran (tl)
- Thai: วิทยาลัย (th) (wít-tá-yaa-lai)
- Turkish: fakülte (tr)
- Ukrainian: факульте́т m (fakulʹtét), відді́лення f (viddílennja)
- Vietnamese: phân khoa (vi) (分 (vi)科), phân khoa đại học (分 (vi)科大學)
- Welsh: ysgol (cy) f
an art movement
- Bulgarian: школа (bg) f (škola)
- Dutch: school (nl) f
- Finnish: koulukunta (fi)
- French: école (fr) f
- German: Schule (de) f
- Hungarian: iskola (hu), irányzat (hu)
- Italian: scuola (it) f
- Polish: szkoła (pl) f, nurt (pl)
- Spanish: escuela (es)
- Swedish: skola (sv) c
(collectively) the followers of a particular doctrine
- Afrikaans: leer (af), skool (af)
- Arabic: مَدْرَسَة (ar) f (madrasa)
- Armenian: դպրոց (hy) (dprocʿ)
- Breton: skol (br) f, skolioù (br) pl
- Bulgarian: шко́ла (bg) f (škóla)
- Catalan: escola (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 學派/学派 (zh) (xuépài)
- Czech: škola (cs) f
- Danish: skole (da)
- Dutch: school (nl) f
- Esperanto: skolo (eo)
- Estonian: kool (et), koolkond
- Finnish: koulukunta (fi)
- French: école (fr) f
- German: Schule (de) f
- Greek: σχολή (el) f (scholí)
- Ancient: αἵρεσις f (haíresis)
- Hebrew: אסכולה (he) f (askola)
- Hungarian: iskola (hu)
- Ido: skolo (io)
- Interlingua: schola (ia)
- Irish: scoil (ga)
- Italian: scuola (it) f
- Japanese: 学派 (ja) (gakuha)
- Korean: 학파(學派) (ko) (hakpa)
- Latin: secta f
- Latvian: skola (lv) f
- Lithuanian: mokykla (lt) f
- Norwegian: skole (no) m
- Polish: szkoła (pl) f
- Portuguese: escola (pt) f, doutrina (pt) f
- Romanian: școală (ro) f
- Russian: уче́ние (ru) n (učénije), шко́ла (ru) f (škóla)
- Scottish Gaelic: sgoil
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: шко̑ла f
- Roman: škȏla (sh) f
- Slovak: škola (sk) f
- Spanish: escuela (es) f
- Swahili: shule (sw)
- Swedish: skola (sv), lära (sv), skolbildning c
- Tagalog: aktitud, aral (tl), turo (tl)
- Turkish: ekol (tr)
- Ukrainian: шко́ла (uk) f (škóla)
- Vietnamese: trường phái (vi) (場派 (vi))
- Welsh: ysgol (cy) f
Verb[edit]
school (third-person singular simple present schools, present participle schooling, simple past and past participle schooled)
- (transitive) To educate, teach, or train (often, but not necessarily, in a school).
-
Many future prime ministers were schooled in Eton.
-
- (transitive) To defeat emphatically, to teach an opponent a harsh lesson.
-
1998 April 13, Leigh Jones, “National Bar Exam Methods Win in ADA Regulation Test”, in The Journal Record:
-
A blind law graduate who put the National Conference of Bar Examiners to the test got schooled in federal court.
-
-
2006, Steve Smith, Forever Red: Confessions of a Cornhusker Football Fan, page 67:
-
Two weeks later, the Cornhuskers put on their road whites again and promptly got schooled by miserable Iowa State in Ames. After the shocking loss […]
-
-
2007, Peter David; Alvin Sargent, Spider-Man 3, Simon and Schuster, →ISBN, page 216:
-
«You again?» Sandman demanded. «I guess you didn’t learn your lesson.»
«This time I’m gonna school you.»
-
-
2022 March 31, David Yaffe-Bellany, “Ben McKenzie Would Like a Word With the Crypto Bros”, in The New York Times[2], →ISSN:
-
Mr. Harris said he was confident he could go toe to toe with any skeptic; he bragged that he’d recently schooled some crypto haters from Vice News.
-
-
- (transitive) To control, or compose, one’s expression.
-
She took care to school her expression, not giving away any of her feelings.
-
Derived terms[edit]
- schooling
Translations[edit]
to educate, teach, or train
- Afrikaans: skool (af)
- Breton: skoliata (br), kelenn (br)
- Bulgarian: обучавам (bg) (obučavam)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 教育 (zh) (jiàoyù), 訓練/训练 (zh) (xùnliàn)
- Dutch: scholen (nl)
- Finnish: kouluttaa (fi)
- German: unterrichten (de), schulen (de)
- Greek: εκπαιδεύω (el) (ekpaidévo), διαπαιδαγωγώ (el) (diapaidagogó), διδάσκω (el) (didásko)
- Hebrew: לימד (liméd)
- Interlingua: educar, instruer, inseniar
- Malay: mendidik
- Norwegian: skole (no), skolere, lære opp, utdanne (no)
- Portuguese: educar (pt), instruir (pt), ensinar (pt), escolarizar
- Romanian: învăța (ro), educa (ro), instrui (ro), școlariza (ro), antrena (ro)
- Russian: учи́ть (ru) (učítʹ)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: шко̏ловати, шко̑лати, обуча́вати
- Roman: škȍlovati (sh), škȏlati (sh), obučávati (sh)
- Slovene: učiti (sl)
- Spanish: educar (es), escolarizar (es)
- Swahili: shule (sw)
- Swedish: skola (sv), lära (sv)
- Tagalog: magturo, turuan, sanayin
- Turkish: eğitim vermek
- Ukrainian: навча́ти (navčáty)
Etymology 2[edit]
From Middle English scole, schole (“group of persons, multitude, host, school of fish”), from Middle Dutch scole (“multitude, troop of people, swarm of animals”), from Old Dutch *scola, *skola (“troop, multitude”), from Frankish *skolu, from Proto-Germanic *skulō (“crowd”), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)kʷel- (“crowd, people”).
Cognate with Middle Low German schōle (“multitude, troop”), Old English scolu (“troop or band of people, host, multitude, school of fish”). Doublet of shoal.
Alternative forms[edit]
- skull (obsolete)
Noun[edit]
school (plural schools)
- (collective) A group of fish or a group of marine mammals such as porpoises, dolphins, or whales.
- The divers encountered a huge school of mackerel.
- Synonym: shoal
- A multitude.
Translations[edit]
a group of fish
- Armenian: վտառ (hy) (vtaṙ)
- Asturian: cardume m
- Belarusian: кася́к m (kasják), згра́я f (zhrája)
- Breton: moudenn (br) f
- Bulgarian: паса́ж (bg) m (pasáž), я́то (bg) n (játo)
- Catalan: banc (ca) m, mola de peix f
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 一群魚/一群鱼 (yīqún yú), 魚群/鱼群 (zh) (yúqún)
- Czech: hejno (cs) n
- Danish: stime c
- Dutch: school (nl) f
- Esperanto: fiŝaro
- Faroese: torva f, vað n
- Finnish: parvi (fi), kalaparvi (fi)
- French: banc (fr) m
- Galician: banco (gl) m, manda (gl) f, cardume (gl) f, fieiro m
- German: Schwarm (de) m
- Greek: κοπάδι (el) n (kopádi)
- Hebrew: לַהֲקַת דָּגִים f (lahakat dagim), עֲדַת דַּגִים f (‘adat dagim)
- Hungarian: raj (hu)
- Icelandic: vaða (is) f, torfa f
- Indonesian: kawanan (id)
- Interlingua: banco (ia)
- Irish: scoil (ga) f, báire m, ráth f
- Italian: banco (it) m
- Japanese: 群れ (ja) (むれ, mure), 魚群 (ja) (ぎょぐん, gyogun)
- Khmer: ហ្វូង (km) (voung)
- Latin: grex m
- Macedonian: јато n (jato)
- Malay: kawanan (ms)
- Maori: matatuhi, rāngai, ranga
- Maranao: boreng, gasang
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: stim (no) m, flokk (no) m (e.g. of dolphins)
- Nynorsk: stim m, flokk m (e.g. of dolphins)
- Polish: ławica (pl)
- Portuguese: cardume (pt) m
- Russian: кося́к (ru) m (kosják), ста́я (ru) f (stája)
- Scottish Gaelic: cliath f, sgaoth m
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: ја̏то n, пло́ва f
- Roman: jȁto (sh), plóva (sh) f
- Spanish: cardumen (es) m, banco (es) m
- Swahili: shule (sw)
- Swedish: stim (sv) n
- Tagalog: kulisaw
- Turkish: sürü (tr)
- Ukrainian: згра́я (uk) f (zhrája)
Verb[edit]
school (third-person singular simple present schools, present participle schooling, simple past and past participle schooled)
- (intransitive, of fish) To form into, or travel in, a school.
Further reading[edit]
Anagrams[edit]
- cholos
Dutch[edit]
Pronunciation[edit]
- IPA(key): /sxoːl/
- Hyphenation: school
- Rhymes: -oːl
Etymology 1[edit]
From Middle Dutch schôle, from Latin schola, from Ancient Greek σχολή (skholḗ).
Noun[edit]
school f (plural scholen, diminutive schooltje n)
- A school, educational institution that provides education, whether combined with research or not
- A thematic educational institute within a larger one, such as in a university for a single research field.
- Any organisation providing instruction.
- A movement or stylistic trend.
Derived terms[edit]
- avondschool
- basisschool
- dansschool
- hogeschool
- kleuterschool
- kweekschool
- lagere school
- leerschool
- middelbare school
- muziekschool
- rijschool
- scholen
- school-tv
- schoolarts
- schoolbank
- schoolboek
- schoolbord
- schoolhuis
- schoolinspectie
- schooljongen
- schoolkind
- schoolkrijt
- schoolmeester
- schoolplein
- schoolradio
- schooltas
- schooltelevisie
- schoolvakantie
- schoolvos
- schoolziek
- sportschool
- toneelschool
Descendants[edit]
- Afrikaans: skool
- → Northern Ndebele: isikolo
- → Nǀuu: skool
- → Sotho: sekolo
- → Southern Ndebele: isikolo
- → Shona: chikoro (through a Nguni intermediate)
- → Tsonga: xikolo
- → Venda: tshikolo
- → Xhosa: isikolo
- → Zulu: isikole
- Berbice Creole Dutch: skul, sulu
- Negerhollands: skoel, skool
- Petjo: skola, sekola
- → Arawak: sulu
- → Aukan: sikoo
- →? Caribbean Hindustani: skul
- → Kwinti: skoro, skoo
- → Papiamentu: skol, skool
- → Saramaccan: sikoò
- → Sranan Tongo: skoro
- → Wayana: sikoro
- → Trió: sikora
Etymology 2[edit]
From Middle Dutch schōle, from Old Dutch *skola, from Proto-West Germanic *skolu, from Proto-Germanic *skulō, from Proto-Indo-European *(s)kʷel- (“crowd, people”).
Noun[edit]
school f (plural scholen, diminutive schooltje n)
- A school, group of fish or other aquatic animals.
Derived terms[edit]
- samenscholen
Etymology 3[edit]
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
Verb[edit]
school
- singular past indicative of schuilen
- first-person singular present indicative of scholen
- imperative of scholen
-
Defenition of the word school
- An institution or building at which children and young people receive education.
- Group of a large number of fish (or other sea animals, such as dolphins or whales), normally from the same species, that swim together.
- train to be discriminative; as of taste or judgment; «Cultivate your musical taste»; «Train your tastebuds»; «She is well schooled in poetry»
- a body of creative artists or writers or thinkers linked by a similar style or by similar teachers; «the Venetian school of painting»
- an educational institution; «the school was founded in 1900»
- an educational institution’s faculty and students; «the school keeps parents informed»; «the whole school turned out for the game»
- educate in or as if in a school; «The children are schooled at great cost to their parents in private institutions»
- a place where young people receive education; «the school was built in 1932»; «he walked to school every morning»
- the process of being formally educated at a school; «what will you do when you finish school?»
- the period of instruction in a school; «stay after school» or «he didn’t miss a single day of school»
- a large group of fish; «a school of small glittering fish swam by»
- a building where young people receive education; «the school was built in 1932»; «he walked to school every morning»
- an educational institution»s faculty and students; «the school keeps parents informed»; «the whole school turned out for the game»
- the period of instruction in a school; the time period when schools is in session; «stay after school»; «he didn»t miss a single day of school»; «when the school day was done we would walk home together»
- swim in or form a large group of fish; «A cluster of schooling fish was attracted to the bait»
- train to be discriminative in taste or judgment; «Cultivate your musical taste»; «Train your tastebuds»; «She is well schooled in poetry»
- a building where young people receive education
- the process of being formally educated at a school
- a large group of fish
- a body of creative artists or writers or thinkers linked by a similar style or by similar teachers
- an educational institution
- an educational institution’s faculty and students
- the period of instruction in a school; the time period when school is in session
- swim in or form a large group of fish
- educate in or as if in a school
- teach or refine to be discriminative in taste or judgment
Synonyms for the word school
-
- civilize
- cultivate
- discipline
- drill
- educate
- instruct
- prepare
- schoolhouse
- schooling
- schooltime
- shoal
- teach
- train
Similar words in the school
-
- school
- school’s
- schoolboy
- schoolboy’s
- schoolboys
- schoolchild
- schoolchildren
- schooldays
- schooled
- schoolgirl
- schoolgirl’s
- schoolgirls
- schoolhouse
- schoolhouse’s
- schoolhouses
- schooling
- schooling’s
- schoolmarm
- schoolmarm’s
- schoolmarms
- schoolmaster
- schoolmaster’s
- schoolmasters
- schoolmate
- schoolmate’s
- schoolmates
- schoolmistress
- schoolmistress’s
- schoolmistresses
- schoolroom
- schoolroom’s
- schoolrooms
- schools
- schoolteacher
- schoolteacher’s
- schoolteachers
- schoolwork
- schoolwork’s
- schoolyard
- schoolyard’s
- schoolyards
Meronymys for the word school
-
- classroom
- faculty
- fish
- school system
- school teacher
- schoolroom
- schoolteacher
- staff
Hyponyms for the word school
-
- academy
- alma mater
- art nouveau
- Ashcan School
- conservatoire
- conservatory
- correspondence school
- crammer
- dance school
- dancing school
- day school
- deconstructivism
- direct-grant school
- driving school
- Eight
- elementary school
- finishing school
- flying school
- grad school
- grade school
- graduate school
- grammar school
- Gymnasium
- historical school
- home-school
- lake poets
- language school
- lycee
- lyceum
- middle school
- night school
- nursing school
- pointillism
- primary school
- private school
- public school
- religious school
- riding school
- Sabbath school
- school of nursing
- secession
- secondary school
- secretarial school
- sezession
- sophisticate
- Sunday school
- tech
- technical school
- training school
- veterinary school
Hypernyms for the word school
-
- amount of time
- animal group
- body
- building
- down
- edifice
- educate
- education
- educational institution
- fine-tune
- period
- period of time
- polish
- refine
- swim
- time period
Idioms for the word school
-
- boarding school
See other words
-
- What is solar system
- The definition of ultimo
- The interpretation of the word truth
- What is meant by troops
- The lexical meaning riposare
- The dictionary meaning of the word regola
- The grammatical meaning of the word proverbio
- Meaning of the word partire
- Literal and figurative meaning of the word padrona
- The origin of the word sacrifice
- Synonym for the word smoke
- Antonyms for the word snow
- Homonyms for the word sword
- Hyponyms for the word salt
- Holonyms for the word snake
- Hypernyms for the word ship
- Proverbs and sayings for the word chef
- Translation of the word in other languages napkin
Moreover, the Italian school was not strictly a national ˜school,™ but rather a working style and a methodology, principally based in Italy, but with representatives to be found elsewhere in the world. ❋ Mancosu, Paolo (2009)
«If it’s school or jail, I’ll go to _school_!» he said. ❋ Amy Brooks (N/A)
The objection to school surgery should be clearly before us, so that we can judge of the two methods that are open to us, — _treatment at school_ vs. _treatment away from school_. ❋ William H. Allen (N/A)
There had for some time been a form of school connected with the royal court, known as the _palace school_, though the study of letters had played but a small part in it. ❋ Ellwood Patterson Cubberley (1904)
Prussia, when a parent refuses, without satisfactory excuse, to send his child to school the time required by law, he is cited before the court, tried, and, if he refuses compliance, the child is taken from him and sent to _school_, and the father to _prison_. ❋ Ira Mayhew (1854)
High school graduation Should i double up ap stat with ap calculus in my senior year at high school~ ❋ Unknown (2009)
The first page is my @home list, followed by @out and @work; during the school semester there is an @school tucked in there as well. ❋ Unknown (2008)
Since a ‘madrasa’ is a school no double ’s’ please – ‘ma’ denoting a place and ‘darasa’ meaning ’study’, literally ‘ a place where one studies’ – one should have expected trouble when a Fox entity says someone attended a ’school’ school. ❋ Unknown (2007)
The Smothers House, after the Cook school was removed in 1858, was occupied for two years by a _free Catholic school_, supported by «The ❋ George Washington Williams (N/A)
When the Beckhams looked at Heath Mount, the $5,000 a term school in Hertfordshire proposed for Brooklyn, they were shown around by the headmaster, the Reverend Harry Matthews. ❋ Andrew Morton (2007)
The term ‘school phobia,’ which emphasizes the anxiety features of the disorder, was coined in 1941, but over time the British term ‘school refusal’ has taken hold on both sides of the Atlantic. ❋ Michael Kesterton (2011)
Q school is short for qualifying school, which is used as the annual qualifying tournaments for the PGA tour and LPGA tour. ❋ Nina Mandell (2010)
They need to learn that hard work in school is a ticket upward. ❋ Unknown (2010)
Thus the only really feasible argument on behalf of teaching poetry in school is the one Selinger advances here — «as part of the national patrimony, with the assumption that elementary students should know their Whitman and Dickinson, Hayden and Hughes, because these are our great national poets.» ❋ Unknown (2009)
Also, apparently, one of the things they’re talking about right now in school is family, and they were talking about «family words.» ❋ Lyda222 (2009)
My 8 year old granddaughter informed me this evening that Seth, in school, is in love with her. ❋ Unknown (2010)
«[what’s wrong]»
«I can’t [move] [my butt]»
«Oh, must be school» ❋ Odochi (2006)
Student 1: [I hate school]!!
Student 2: Agreed
Teacher: *hears conversation*
Teacher: You both have [detention] for [2 weeks]!
Students: WTF! ❋ The Knife Ninja (2012)
‘Am I actually going to use fucking [square roots] [when I’m] [23] and have a job?’
Thanks School! ❋ /giva Fuck About You (2007)
Student: Mr. Smith, when was the last time you needed to know the [population density] of Finland?
Teacher: IF YOU DON’T LEARN THIS POINTLESS SHIT EVEN MOST [FINNS] PROBABLY DON’T KNOW, YOU’LL NEVER GO ON TO A REALLY EXPENSIVE SCHOOL TO IMPRESS ANOTHER PROFESSOR, AND THEN GET A PIECE OF PAPER TO IMPRESS ANOTHER BEAUROCRAT!
Student:… Fuck this, I’m going to go carve wood.
Teacher: GET BACK HERE! DETENTION!
10 years later: …He attributes his massive success to [skipping school] so he could practice woodcarving, which when coupled with his love of music led him to carve [flutes]. Now 26, Mr. Student is doing what he loves and living within his means. What a shame the rest of us are brainwashed fucks. This is Anchorman, [XYA] News.
——
I am always ready to learn, I am never ready to go to school.
——
Eric, damn it, you failed your chemistry test! You’ll die of lung cancer now!
… But Dad, I want to be a poet…
SHUT UP, ERIC! You’re going to fail at life and never get married or have kids or do anything because YOU FAILED HIGH SCHOOL CHEMISTRY!
Dad, do you remember any of your high school chemistry?
Yeah, I remember all of it and it’s what’s helped me get this bullshit cubicle job. Now go [get on your bike] and go to school. ❋ Eric Greenfeld (2006)
[my house] had a school like [atmosphere].school makes me [depressed] ❋ Silent-suicide (2006)
[Mom can] i [stay home] from school today? my ass is still sore from [english class] yesterday ❋ Smokey (2003)
At school…
Teacher: Ok kids, I give you permission to talk once you have finished your [assignment].
Student: *Finishes work and starts [to yak]*
Teacher: HEY, YOU! I told you not to talk until you’ve finished your work! What are you stupid, son?
Student: But I’m finished my work sir…
Teacher: [Well then] stop talking!
(IDIOT) ❋ Alozaps (2006)
[What the f]*** is wrong with people that [send] their kids to [scholl]? ❋ Lieutenant Tarpit (2004)
School is [stress], High school is [amplified] stress..
[Let’s not] even TALK about college.. ❋ Uhhnonymous (2009)
The only thing school teaches [kids] is [that life] is [messed up]! ❋ Idk410 (2008)
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WordReference Random House Learner’s Dictionary of American English © 2023 school1 /skul/USA pronunciation n.
adj. [before a noun]
v. [~ + object]
See -schol-.
v. [no object]
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2023 school1
adj.
v.t.
school′a•ble, adj.
school2
v.i.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: school /skuːl/ n
vb (transitive)
Etymology: Old English scōl, from Latin schola school, from Greek skholē leisure spent in the pursuit of knowledge school /skuːl/ n
vb
Etymology: Old English scolu shoal² ‘school‘ also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations): |
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