playschool

[ UK /plˈe‍ɪskuːl/ ]
NOUN
  1. a small informal nursery group meeting for half-day sessions
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How To Use playschool In A Sentence

  • I am just as thunderstruck as my son, Bevan Jake, had been when he was two years old and, at playschool, his dry, red kidney bean had exploded from the dirt in a Dixie cup into a tender two-leaf shoot. MY EMPIRE OF DIRT
  • Betty has been the driving force behind the community playschool since it first opened its doors in the Parish Hall 13 years ago.
  • Twenty-four children are already signed up for the new term and Ms Hughes wanted to assure parents that the playschool will be opening as scheduled in September.
  • He was really getting desperate when, eventually, he started thinking clearly and buttonholed the mother of the doll owner at playschool.
  • Along with modernisation, these pre-school institutions assumed the form of playschools and kindergartens.
  • The centre is used for ju-jitsu, judo, wing chun, bowls, dancing, a dog club, a car club, a playschool and by a majorette troupe.
  • I go to 'playschool' with my youngest grand daugher (4) a couple of times a month. In only SIX easy steps!
  • This is a separate session from the playschool and is taking place upstairs in the Resource Centre.
  • Three o'clock in the morning, bopping through a weird limb-jerking dance routine, and she looks like a child at playschool.
  • Before everyone learned the definition of "waterboarding," playschool children talked of (often with an Asian country's name attached at the front) the "water torture. Obama's "Drip, Drip, Drip..." Intelligence Problem
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