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infant school

NOUN
  1. British school for children aged 5-7

How To Use infant school In A Sentence

  • The a cappella style of vocals that sit on top of each other is like listening to a band whose main musical influences are the playground rhymes and infant school rounds rather than actual songs.
  • Over the next 50 years the senior boys and girls moved to other schools, and in 1946 the school was divided into a junior school and an infant school.
  • An infant school is a school for children from about five to seven years of age.
  • This infant school was sometimes part of a junior school which catered for seven to eleven year olds.
  • He plays Dewey, a heavy rock musician - in both senses - who is thrown out of his band for excessive guitar solos and inappropriate stage-diving, and has to take a job as a supply teacher at an uptight private infant school.
  • Proposals have been revealed for the infant school, junior school and nursery to move to a new campus off Sheepfoot Lane, within the perimeter of Heaton Park.
  • A total of 27 reception pupils were due to begin their school life at Burrsville Infant School, in Craigfield Avenue, Great Clacton, yesterday.
  • Their nursery schools correspond roughly to our infant schools.
  • Primary schools consist mainly of: Infant schools - for children aged 5-7 years.
  • Only the juniors have a crossing lady, the infant school children have nothing, so please slow down.
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