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  2. Student Names or Student's Names or Student's Name

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/117432/student-names-or-students-names-or...

    "Student's Names" is wrong in general English. (Technically, this is also correct for a table and describing the names of a single student, but you will never see this in practice; instead, you will see things like "Student's Full Name" or "Student's First and Last Name".)

  3. Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.

  4. Secondary is S1 through S6, with students typically being able to leave at the end of S4 (when they turn 16). America K-12 ( k indergarten to 12 ) is pre-school ("kindergarten"), followed by elementary (1st to 4th grade), middle school or junior high (5th to 8th/9th grade), followed by high school (9th/10th to 12th grade).

  5. word usage - Call the roll in the classroom? - English Language...

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/142915/call-the-roll-in-the-classroom

    The teacher takes attendance every day. (M-W) To call the roll is used both in AmE and BrE: to call off or recite a list or roll of names of persons belonging to an organization, in order to ascertain who are present or to obtain responses from those present. Also roll call: the process of calling out a list of names to establish who is present.

  6. to call the names of people from a list of those enrolled, expecting them to reply if they are present. After I call the roll, please open your books to page 12. I will take roll, and then we will do arithmetic. (TFD) The examples are. Miss Janette takes attendance of students in her class and she notices Brandon is not present today.

  7. 0. Using "name" as an attributive noun is acceptable "a name list" or even hyphenated "name-list". Similarly we can get "fruitbowl" (this compound has become so common that it is increasingly written as one word) and "stupid-word-dictionary". However "list of names" is a normal and natural way of describing this: Have you got the list of names ...

  8. pronouns - Which is correct, "their name" or "their names"? -...

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/227744/which-is-correct-their-name-or-their-names

    I've got a command that says: Point to the items and color them. Say its name. I'm sure it should be their instead of its, but I'm not 100% sure if it should be their name or their names.

  9. student — singular noun: "The student did well on the exam." students — plural noun: "The students did well on their exams." student's — singular possessive adjective: "The student's performance was excellent." students' — plural possessive adjective: "The students' exam scores were all fantastic!" Adding the apostrophe s to a noun ...

  10. That's because you expect that the people you are talking to probably know who you are, or at least could look at the list of invitees, but they don't necessarily know that this voice is yours. "Hello, this is James" was also a common way for someone named James to answer the phone, back in the days when phones were more tied to a location than ...

  11. prepositions - Is "the below list" correct? - English Language...

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/218502/is-the-below-list-correct

    Definition of below (Entry 4 of 4) : written or discussed lower on the same page or on a following page. the below list. The phrase sounds off to me. I always say "the list below" as in "you can find everything in the list below". The sentence "you can find everything in the below list" is understandable but will certainly strike me as unnatural.