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[ UK /pɹˈiːskuːl/ ]
[ US /ˈpɹiˌskuɫ, pɹiˈskuɫ/ ]
NOUN
  1. an educational institution for children too young for elementary school

How To Use preschool In A Sentence

  • She was impressed that a 17-year-old would want to face a roomful of preschoolers.
  • In Mexico, kindergarten teachers visit the preschools that their future students are attending, thus facilitating coordinated planning for the children's transitions between programs.
  • One taken at Kumon preschool enrichment programs is of a child, just out of diapers, sitting at a table writing the numbers 42, 43, 12, and 13; of a three-year old learning to read; and of a six year old able to recite the past, present and future tense of the word "practice. Ellen Galinsky: Fast-Tracking to Kindergarten? How About a Good Track to Learning in Kindergarten and Beyond?
  • Nigeria also has preschools, special education, adult education, and classes for the gifted and talented.
  • At Bethlehem College Preschool, caretakers live on the property and are thought to deter foot-traffic.
  • I tried to track this down on the Internet and all references included Rep. An aoudad, which is a type of barbary sheep native to Africa, was a recent visitor at Kreative Learning Preschool. The Delphos Herald
  • CAMARILLO -- A Jewish preschool in Camarillo has been vandalized with swastikas and anti-Semitic phrases for the second time in a week and the fourth time in a year. Larisa Alexandrovna: The Evil of It All...
  • With some difficulty, we managed to dissuade our left-leaning daughter from buying pint-sized T-shirts for our preschool grandchildren.
  • but then the possessiveness and competition, ingrained in us from early childhood, from preschool even, is like a thorn in our side which pricks every time a foreigner is seen.
  • Preschool children are not ye fully able to distinguish fantasy from reality.
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