A progressive one.
The Kids from others schools showed as what could be achieved by united working class action
Grammar turns sounds into speech. Without it, there is no language.
Yes, but most schools do not allow a student to use it in class
first your teacher has to sign up for it then adds students. then teacher will tell the class the class name then they have to enter a password
Every teacher & school is different. A lot of schools give you a warning the 1st time. After that they can give you a demarit, detention, or some schools even give you suspinsions. Hoped that helped. :)
use different techniques and play it differently
The price would decrease.
The idea that anyone would sue to change the alphabet that we use sounds like an urban myth, since no court has the power to change the alphabet we use. The idea that the UCLA would do so sounds like a campaign of denigration. The answer is most certainly 'no'.
Irish is a mandatory subject in schools, so schools running the Irish curriculum will have it as part of what they teach. Only a few schools would be exempt. There are even schools that use Irish as the main language and teach everything through the Irish language.
In Puerto Rico's middle schools, elementary schools and high schools they speak Spanish, in all classes, except the English class wich is in English. However there are English speaking private schools. Remeber that our first language is Spanish and then English.
If you like to learn more about the English language you may be able to go to your local schools and see if you can audit or sit in on a class. Most teachers and schools are open to people sitting in on the class. You may even have access to some of the worksheets they use.