| school |  |  | 
| n. (group) | 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. | 
| n. (artifact) | 2. school, schoolhouse | a building where young people receive education.; "the school was built in 1932"; "he walked to school every morning" | 
 |  ~ 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. | 
| n. (cognition) | 3. school, schooling | the process of being formally educated at a school.; "what will you do when you finish school?" | 
 |  ~ education | the gradual process of acquiring knowledge.; "education is a preparation for life"; "a girl's education was less important than a boy's" | 
| n. (group) | 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. | 
| n. (time) | 5. school, school day, schooltime | 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" | 
 |  ~ 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. | 
| n. (group) | 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. | 
| n. (group) | 7. school, shoal | a large group of fish.; "a school of small glittering fish swam by" | 
 |  ~ 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. | 
| v. (social) | 8. 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" | 
| v. (social) | 9. civilise, civilize, cultivate, educate, school, train | teach or refine to be discriminative in taste or judgment.; "Cultivate your musical taste"; "Train your tastebuds"; "She is well schooled in poetry" | 
 |  ~ 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" | 
| v. (motion) | 10. 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" | 
| hang around |  |  | 
| v. (stative) | 1. footle, hang around, lallygag, linger, loaf, loiter, lollygag, lounge, lurk, mess about, mill about, mill around, tarry | be about.; "The high school students like to loiter in the Central Square"; "Who is this man that is hanging around the department?" | 
 |  ~ be | have the quality of being; (copula, used with an adjective or a predicate noun).; "John is rich"; "This is not a good answer" | 
 |  ~ prowl, lurch | loiter about, with no apparent aim. | 
Recent comments
5 days 6 hours ago
1 week 3 days ago
1 week 4 days ago
6 weeks 17 hours ago
21 weeks 4 days ago
28 weeks 1 day ago
41 weeks 2 days ago
44 weeks 2 days ago
46 weeks 1 day ago
1 year 1 week ago