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parish school

  • 1 Parish School Of Religion

    Religion: PSR

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Parish School Of Religion

  • 2 церковнопарафіяльна школа

    Українсько-англійський словник > церковнопарафіяльна школа

  • 3 школа приходская

    Русско-английский глоссарий христианской лексики > школа приходская

  • 4 церковноприходская школа

    Русско-английский синонимический словарь > церковноприходская школа

  • 5 церковноприходский

    Русско-английский словарь Смирнитского > церковноприходский

  • 6 церковно-приходский

    parish (attr)

    церковно-прихо́дская шко́ла — parish school

    Новый большой русско-английский словарь > церковно-приходский

  • 7 parroquial

    adj.
    1 parish.
    iglesia parroquial parish church
    2 parochial, of the parish, parish.
    * * *
    1 parish, parochial
    * * *
    ADJ parochial, parish antes de s
    * * *
    adjetivo (Relig) <registro/boletín> parish (before n); < responsabilidad> parochial

    escuela parroquialparochial school (AmE), parish school (BrE)

    * * *
    ----
    * biblioteca parroquial = parochial library, parish library.
    * casa parroquial = parsonage house, parsonage.
    * iglesia parroquial = parish church.
    * * *
    adjetivo (Relig) <registro/boletín> parish (before n); < responsabilidad> parochial

    escuela parroquialparochial school (AmE), parish school (BrE)

    * * *
    * biblioteca parroquial = parochial library, parish library.
    * casa parroquial = parsonage house, parsonage.
    * iglesia parroquial = parish church.
    * * *
    1 ( Relig) ‹registro/boletín› parish ( before n); ‹responsabilidad› parochial
    escuela parroquial parochial school ( AmE), parish school ( BrE)
    2 ( Col pey) (limitado) parochial ( pej)
    * * *
    parish;
    iglesia parroquial parish church
    * * *
    adj parish atr, parochial;
    iglesia parroquial parish church
    * * *
    : parochial

    Spanish-English dictionary > parroquial

  • 8 scuola

    f school
    scuola di lingue language school
    scuola elementare primary school
    scuola media secondary school
    scuola serale evening classes pl
    scuola superiore high school
    scuola guida driving school
    andare a scuola go to school
    * * *
    scuola s.f.
    1 school; ( istruzione) education: scuola materna, nursery school; scuola elementare, primary (o elementary) school; scuola media inferiore, secondary school (o amer. junior high school); scuola media superiore, secondary school (o amer. high school); scuola mista, mixed school; scuola parificata, state-recognised private school; scuola parrocchiale, parish school; scuola privata, private school; scuola pubblica, state school; scuola dell'obbligo, compulsory education; scuola rurale, rural (o village) school; scuola a tempo pieno, full-time school; scuola diurna, day-classes; scuola serale, evening classes (o evening school); scuola all'aperto, open-air school; scuola magistrale, (teachers) training college; scuola tecnica, technical school; scuola commerciale, commercial school (o school of commerce); scuola aziendale, business school; scuola professionale, vocational (o trade) school; scuola di economia, school of economics; scuola di ballo, dancing school; scuola di disegno, drawing (o art) school; scuola di equitazione, riding school; scuola di scherma, fencing school; scuola di taglio, school of dress-making; compagno di scuola, school-friend (o schoolfellow o schoolmate); maestra di scuola, schoolmistress (o schoolteacher); maestro di scuola, schoolmaster (o schoolteacher); andare a scuola, to go to school; quando riapre la scuola?, when will school start again?; lasciare la scuola, to leave school; la scuola non gli piace, he does not like school // marinare la scuola, to play truant // cantiere scuola, workshop // nave scuola, training ship // alta scuola, haute école
    2 ( lezione) school, lesson (anche fig.); ( esempio) example: ieri non avemmo scuola, yesterday we had no lessons (o school); faccio scuola dalle 17 alle 21, I teach from 5 o'clock to 9 o'clock; questo periodo all'estero sarà un'ottima scuola per lui, this period abroad will be a very good experience for him; la scuola dell'esperienza, the school of experience; ciò ti serva di scuola, let this be a lesson (o an example) to you // seguire la scuola di qlcu., to follow s.o.'s example
    3 (arte, fil., scient.) school: (pitt.) la scuola fiamminga, fiorentina, the Dutch, Florentine school; (lett.) la scuola romantica, the Romantic school; (fil.) la scuola socratica, platonica, the Socratic, Platonic school // cresciuto alla scuola del materialismo, reared in the school of materialism // appartiene alla vecchia scuola, he belongs to the old school // fare scuola, to create a school (o to set a fashion).
    * * *
    ['skwɔla]
    1. sf
    (istituzione, edificio) school
    2. agg inv
    See:
    Cultural note: scuola Following the passage of the law on educational reform in 2003, Italian children go to "scuola dell'infanzia" for three years (age 3-6), after which they attend "scuola primaria" for five years (age 6-11). The first stage of education is then completed by three years of "scuola secondaria di primo grado" (age 11-14). For the second stage of their education, students can choose between various types of school and can specialize in various subjects.
    * * *
    ['skwɔla]
    sostantivo femminile

    essere, andare a scuola — to be at, to go to school

    avere scuola (lezione) to have school

    2) (sistema) education (system)
    3) (fonte di formazione) school (di of), training (di for, in)

    scuola di vita — school of hard knocks, university of life, training for life

    4) art. letter. filos. school

    scuola elementareprimary o elementary school, grade school AE

    scuola di lingue — school of languages, language school

    scuola magistrale — = formerly, high school specializing in education

    scuola materna — nursery school, kindergarten, preschool AE

    scuola media inferiore — = three years post elementary course, middle school BE, junior high school AE

    scuola media superiore — = course of studies following middle school/junior high school and preceding university

    scuola pubblica — state school, public school AE

    scuola serale — evening school, night school

    scuola di stato o statale state school; scuola superiore — secondary school

    ••

    fare scuola (insegnare) to teach (school); (avere seguaci) to gain a following

    * * *
    scuola
    /'skwɔla/
    sostantivo f.
     1 school; essere, andare a scuola to be at, to go to school; la scuola è finita school is over; fin dai tempi della scuola since one's schooldays; avere scuola (lezione) to have school
     2 (sistema) education (system); riformare la scuola to reform the education system
     3 (fonte di formazione) school (di of), training (di for, in); scuola di vita school of hard knocks, university of life, training for life; della vecchia scuola of the old school
     4 art. letter. filos. school; scuola fiamminga Dutch School; scuola di pensiero school of thought
    fare scuola (insegnare) to teach (school); (avere seguaci) to gain a following
    \
    scuola alberghiera hotel-management school; scuola di ballo dancing school; scuola per corrispondenza correspondence college; scuola di danza ballet school; scuola elementare primary o elementary school, grade school AE; scuola guida driving school; scuola di lingue school of languages, language school; scuola magistrale = formerly, high school specializing in education; scuola materna nursery school, kindergarten, preschool AE; scuola media inferiore = three years post elementary course, middle school BE, junior high school AE; scuola media superiore = course of studies following middle school/junior high school and preceding university; scuola dell'obbligo compulsory education; scuola privata private school; scuola professionale vocational school; scuola pubblica state school, public school AE; scuola secondaria →  scuola superiore; scuola serale evening school, night school; scuola di stato o statale state school; scuola superiore secondary school.

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > scuola

  • 9 Gemeinderechnungsprüfer

    Gemeinderechnungsprüfer
    internal auditor (Br.);
    Gemeinderecht local law (US);
    Gemeindesatzung city (municipal) ordinance (US), charter of a borough, local byelaw (Br.), municipal charter (US);
    Gemeindeschreiber parish clerk (Br.);
    Gemeindeschulden municipal (local) debts;
    Gemeindeschule parish school;
    Gemeindesekretär parish clerk (Br.).

    Business german-english dictionary > Gemeinderechnungsprüfer

  • 10 szkół|ka

    f 1. dim. school
    - szkółka parafialna parish school
    2. (kursy) school
    - szkółka narciarska/jazdy na łyżwach a skiing/ice-skating school
    3. Leśn. nursery
    - □ szkółka niedzielna Sunday school

    The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > szkół|ka

  • 11 Gemeindeschule

    Gemeindeschule f GEN village school
    * * *
    f < Geschäft> village school
    * * *
    Gemeindeschule
    parish school

    Business german-english dictionary > Gemeindeschule

  • 12 McAdam, John Loudon

    [br]
    b. 21 September 1756 Ayr, Ayrshire, Scotland
    d. 26 November 1836 Moffat, Dumfriesshire, Scotland
    [br]
    Scottish road builder, inventor of the macadam road surface.
    [br]
    McAdam was the son of one of the founder of the first bank in Ayr. As an infant, he nearly died in a fire which destroyed the family's house of Laywyne, in Carsphairn parish; the family then moved to Blairquhan, near Straiton. Thence he went to the parish school in Maybole, where he is said to have made a model section of a local road. In 1770, when his father died, he was sent to America where he was brought up by an uncle who was a merchant in New York. He stayed in America until the close of the revolution, becoming an agent for the sale of prizes and managing to amass a considerable fortune. He returned to Scotland where he settled at Sauchrie in Ayrshire. There he was a magistrate, Deputy-Lieutenant of the county and a road trustee, spending thirteen years there. In 1798 he moved to Falmouth in Devon, England, on his appointment as agent for revictualling of the Royal Navy in western ports.
    He continued the series of experiments started in Ayrshire on the construction of roads. From these he concluded that a road should be built on a raised foundation with drains formed on either side, and should be composed of a number of layers of hard stone broken into angular fragments of roughly cubical shape; the bottom layer would be larger rocks, with layers of progressively smaller rocks above, all bound together with fine gravel. This would become compacted and almost impermeable to water by the action of the traffic passing over it. In 1815 he was appointed Surveyor-General of Bristol's roads and put his theories to the test.
    In 1823 a Committee of the House of Commons was appointed to consider the use of "macadamized" roads in larger towns; McAdam gave evidence to this committee, and it voted to give him £10,000 for his past work. In 1827 he was appointed Surveyor-General of Roads and moved to Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire. From there he made yearly visits to Scotland and it was while returning from one of these that he died, at Moffat in the Scottish Borders. He had married twice, both times to American women; his first wife was the mother of all seven of his children.
    McAdam's method of road construction was much cheaper than that of Thomas Telford, and did much to ease travel and communications; it was therefore adopted by the majority of Turnpike Trusts in Britain, and the macadamization process quickly spread to other countries.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1819. A Practical Essay on the Scientific Repair and Preservation of Roads.
    1820. Present State of Road-Making.
    Further Reading
    R.Devereux, 1936, John Loudon McAdam: A Chapter from the History of Highways, London: Oxford University Press.
    IMcN

    Biographical history of technology > McAdam, John Loudon

  • 13 Г-320

    СВОИМ (СОБСТВЕННЫМ) ГОРБОМ зарабатывать, добывать что и т. п. NP instrum these forms only adv fixed WO
    (to earn, attain sth.) through one's own hard work
    with one's own sweat
    by the sweat of one's brow by one's own toil by dint of hard work (labor).
    ...Над тобой стоят дармоеды-надзиратели... тебя попрекают куском хлеба, который ты заработал своим горбом (Марченко 1)....You have these parasitical warders standing over you, grudging you the crust of bread that you've earned with your own sweat (1a).
    Все подтверждают и другое - (Мигулин) образованный, книгочей, грамотней его не сыскать, сначала учился в церковноприходской, потом в гимназии, в Новочеркасском юнкерском, и всё своим горбом, натужливыми стараниями... (Трифонов 6). Everyone claims that he (Migulin) has other qualities besides: that he is educated, that a better read, more literate man you won't find. First he went to the parish school, then to the high school and Novocherkassk Cadet College, and all by the sweat of his...brow, by his own strenuous efforts (6a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > Г-320

  • 14 своим горбом

    СВОИМ < СОБСТВЕННЫМ> ГОРБОМ зарабатывать, добывать что и т.п.
    [NPinstrum; these forms only; adv; fixed WO]
    =====
    (to earn, attain sth.) through one's own hard work:
    - by dint of hard work (labor).
         ♦...Над тобой стоят дармоеды-надзиратели... тебя попрекают куском хлеба, который ты заработал своим горбом (Марченко 1)....You have these parasitical warders standing over you, grudging you the crust of bread that you've earned with your own sweat (1a).
         ♦ Все подтверждают и другое - [Мигулин] образованный, книгочей, грамотней его не сыскать, сначала учился в церковноприходской, потом в гимназии, в Новочеркасском юнкерском, и всё своим горбом, натужливыми стараниями... (Трифонов 6). Everyone claims that he [Migulin] has other qualities besides: that he is educated, that a better read, more literate man you won't find. First he went to the parish school, then to the high school and Novocherkassk Cadet College, and all by the sweat of his...brow, by his own strenuous efforts (6a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > своим горбом

  • 15 собственным горбом

    СВОИМ < СОБСТВЕННЫМ> ГОРБОМ зарабатывать, добывать что и т.п.
    [NPinstrum; these forms only; adv; fixed WO]
    =====
    (to earn, attain sth.) through one's own hard work:
    - by dint of hard work (labor).
         ♦...Над тобой стоят дармоеды-надзиратели... тебя попрекают куском хлеба, который ты заработал своим горбом (Марченко 1)....You have these parasitical warders standing over you, grudging you the crust of bread that you've earned with your own sweat (1a).
         ♦ Все подтверждают и другое - [Мигулин] образованный, книгочей, грамотней его не сыскать, сначала учился в церковноприходской, потом в гимназии, в Новочеркасском юнкерском, и всё своим горбом, натужливыми стараниями... (Трифонов 6). Everyone claims that he [Migulin] has other qualities besides: that he is educated, that a better read, more literate man you won't find. First he went to the parish school, then to the high school and Novocherkassk Cadet College, and all by the sweat of his...brow, by his own strenuous efforts (6a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > собственным горбом

  • 16 escuela parroquial

    f.
    parochial school, parish school.

    Spanish-English dictionary > escuela parroquial

  • 17 Telford, Thomas

    SUBJECT AREA: Canals, Civil engineering
    [br]
    b. 9 August 1757 Glendinning, Dumfriesshire, Scotland
    d. 2 September 1834 London, England.
    [br]
    Scottish civil engineer.
    [br]
    Telford was the son of a shepherd, who died when the boy was in his first year. Brought up by his mother, Janet Jackson, he attended the parish school at Westerkirk. He was apprenticed to a stonemason in Lochmaben and to another in Langholm. In 1780 he walked from Eskdale to Edinburgh and in 1872 rode to London on a horse that he was to deliver there. He worked for Sir William Chambers as a mason on Somerset House, then on the Eskdale house of Sir James Johnstone. In 1783–4 he worked on the new Commissioner's House and other buildings at Portsmouth dockyard.
    In late 1786 Telford was appointed County Surveyor for Shropshire and moved to Shrewsbury Castle, with work initially on the new infirmary and County Gaol. He designed the church of St Mary Magdalene, Bridgnorth, and also the church at Madley. Telford built his first bridge in 1790–2 at Montford; between 1790 and 1796 he built forty-five road bridges in Shropshire, including Buildwas Bridge. In September 1793 he was appointed general agent, engineer and architect to the Ellesmere Canal, which was to connect the Mersey and Dee rivers with the Severn at Shrewsbury; William Jessop was Principal Engineer. This work included the Pont Cysyllte aqueduct, a 1,000 ft (305 m) long cast-iron trough 127 ft (39 m) above ground level, which entailed an on-site ironworks and took ten years to complete; the aqueduct is still in use today. In 1800 Telford put forward a plan for a new London Bridge with a single cast-iron arch with a span of 600 ft (183 m) but this was not built.
    In 1801 Telford was appointed engineer to the British Fisheries Society "to report on Highland Communications" in Scotland where, over the following eighteen years, 920 miles (1,480 km) of new roads were built, 280 miles (450 km) of the old military roads were realigned and rebuilt, over 1,000 bridges were constructed and much harbour work done, all under Telford's direction. A further 180 miles (290 km) of new roads were also constructed in the Lowlands of Scotland. From 1804 to 1822 he was also engaged on the construction of the Caledonian Canal: 119 miles (191 km) in all, 58 miles (93 km) being sea loch, 38 miles (61 km) being Lochs Lochy, Oich and Ness, 23 miles (37 km) having to be cut.
    In 1808 he was invited by King Gustav IV Adolf of Sweden to assist Count Baltzar von Platen in the survey and construction of a canal between the North Sea and the Baltic. Telford surveyed the 114 mile (183 km) route in six weeks; 53 miles (85 km) of new canal were to be cut. Soon after the plans for the canal were completed, the King of Sweden created him a Knight of the Order of Vasa, an honour that he would have liked to have declined. At one time some 60,000 soldiers and seamen were engaged on the work, Telford supplying supervisors, machinery—including an 8 hp steam dredger from the Donkin works and machinery for two small paddle boats—and ironwork for some of the locks. Under his direction an ironworks was set up at Motala, the foundation of an important Swedish industrial concern which is still flourishing today. The Gotha Canal was opened in September 1832.
    In 1811 Telford was asked to make recommendations for the improvement of the Shrewsbury to Holyhead section of the London-Holyhead road, and in 1815 he was asked to survey the whole route from London for a Parliamentary Committee. Construction of his new road took fifteen years, apart from the bridges at Conway and over the Menai Straits, both suspension bridges by Telford and opened in 1826. The Menai bridge had a span of 579 ft (176 m), the roadway being 153 ft (47 m) above the water level.
    In 1817 Telford was appointed Engineer to the Exchequer Loan Commission, a body set up to make capital loans for deserving projects in the hard times that followed after the peace of Waterloo. In 1820 he became the first President of the Engineers Institute, which gained its Royal Charter in 1828 to become the Institution of Civil Engineers. He was appointed Engineer to the St Katharine's Dock Company during its construction from 1825 to 1828, and was consulted on several early railway projects including the Liverpool and Manchester as well as a number of canal works in the Midlands including the new Harecastle tunnel, 3,000 ft (914 m) long.
    Telford led a largely itinerant life, living in hotels and lodgings, acquiring his own house for the first time in 1821, 24 Abingdon Street, Westminster, which was partly used as a school for young civil engineers. He died there in 1834, after suffering in his later years from the isolation of deafness. He was buried in Westminster Abbey.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRSE 1803. Knight of the Order of Vasa, Sweden 1808. FRS 1827. First President, Engineers Insitute 1820.
    Further Reading
    L.T.C.Rolt, 1979, Thomas Telford, London: Penguin.
    C.Hadfield, 1993, Thomas Telford's Temptation, London: M. \& M.Baldwin.
    IMcN

    Biographical history of technology > Telford, Thomas

  • 18 школа приходская

    Christianity: parish school

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > школа приходская

  • 19 Murdock (Murdoch), William

    [br]
    b. 21 August 1754 Cumnock, Ayrshire, Scotland
    d. 15 November 1839 Handsworth, Birmingham, England
    [br]
    Scottish engineer and inventor, pioneer in coal-gas production.
    [br]
    He was the third child and the eldest of three boys born to John Murdoch and Anna Bruce. His father, a millwright and joiner, spelled his name Murdock on moving to England. He was educated for some years at Old Cumnock Parish School and in 1777, with his father, he built a "wooden horse", supposed to have been a form of cycle. In 1777 he set out for the Soho manufactory of Boulton \& Watt, where he quickly found employment, Boulton supposedly being impressed by the lad's hat. This was oval and made of wood, and young William had turned it himself on a lathe of his own manufacture. Murdock quickly became Boulton \& Watt's representative in Cornwall, where there was a flourishing demand for steam-engines. He lived at Redruth during this period.
    It is said that a number of the inventions generally ascribed to James Watt are in fact as much due to Murdock as to Watt. Examples are the piston and slide valve and the sun-and-planet gearing. A number of other inventions are attributed to Murdock alone: typical of these is the oscillating cylinder engine which obviated the need for an overhead beam.
    In about 1784 he planned a steam-driven road carriage of which he made a working model. He also planned a high-pressure non-condensing engine. The model carriage was demonstrated before Murdock's friends and travelled at a speed of 6–8 mph (10–13 km/h). Boulton and Watt were both antagonistic to their employees' developing independent inventions, and when in 1786 Murdock set out with his model for the Patent Office, having received no reply to a letter he had sent to Watt, Boulton intercepted him on the open road near Exeter and dissuaded him from going any further.
    In 1785 he married Mary Painter, daughter of a mine captain. She bore him four children, two of whom died in infancy, those surviving eventually joining their father at the Soho Works. Murdock was a great believer in pneumatic power: he had a pneumatic bell-push at Sycamore House, his home near Soho. The pattern-makers lathe at the Soho Works worked for thirty-five years from an air motor. He also conceived the idea of a vacuum piston engine to exhaust a pipe, later developed by the London Pneumatic Despatch Company's railway and the forerunner of the atmospheric railway.
    Another field in which Murdock was a pioneer was the gas industry. In 1791, in Redruth, he was experimenting with different feedstocks in his home-cum-office in Cross Street: of wood, peat and coal, he preferred the last. He designed and built in the backyard of his house a prototype generator, washer, storage and distribution plant, and publicized the efficiency of coal gas as an illuminant by using it to light his own home. In 1794 or 1795 he informed Boulton and Watt of his experimental work and of its success, suggesting that a patent should be applied for. James Watt Junior was now in the firm and was against patenting the idea since they had had so much trouble with previous patents and had been involved in so much litigation. He refused Murdock's request and for a short time Murdock left the firm to go home to his father's mill. Boulton \& Watt soon recognized the loss of a valuable servant and, in a short time, he was again employed at Soho, now as Engineer and Superintendent at the increased salary of £300 per year plus a 1 per cent commission. From this income, he left £14,000 when he died in 1839.
    In 1798 the workshops of Boulton and Watt were permanently lit by gas, starting with the foundry building. The 180 ft (55 m) façade of the Soho works was illuminated by gas for the Peace of Paris in June 1814. By 1804, Murdock had brought his apparatus to a point where Boulton \& Watt were able to canvas for orders. Murdock continued with the company after the death of James Watt in 1819, but retired in 1830 and continued to live at Sycamore House, Handsworth, near Birmingham.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Royal Society Rumford Gold Medal 1808.
    Further Reading
    S.Smiles, 1861, Lives of the Engineers, Vol. IV: Boulton and Watt, London: John Murray.
    H.W.Dickinson and R.Jenkins, 1927, James Watt and the Steam Engine, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
    J.A.McCash, 1966, "William Murdoch. Faithful servant" in E.G.Semler (ed.), The Great Masters. Engineering Heritage, Vol. II, London: Institution of Mechanical Engineers/Heinemann.
    IMcN

    Biographical history of technology > Murdock (Murdoch), William

  • 20 Pfarrschule

    f
    parish school

    Deutsch-Englisches Wörterbuch > Pfarrschule

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  • Ouachita Parish School Board — is a school district headquartered in Monroe, Louisiana, United States. The district serves areas in Ouachita Parish except for areas within the City of Monroe; those areas are served by the Monroe City School System. Neal Lane Lanny Johnson, the …   Wikipedia

  • St. John the Baptist Parish School Board — is a school district headquartered in unincorporated St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana, United States. [ [http://www.sjbparish.com/services details.asp?dpID=25 School Board] . St. John the Baptist Parish .] It serves St. John the Baptist… …   Wikipedia

  • Iberia Parish School System — is a school district headquartered in New Iberia, Louisiana, United States.The district serves all of Iberia Parish and all of the city of Delcambre, which has portions located in Vermilion Parish.chool uniformsBeginning in the 2000 2001 school… …   Wikipedia

  • Tangipahoa Parish School Board — is a school district headquartered in unincorporated Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana, United States.The district serves Tangipahoa Parish.chool uniformsAll students are required to wear school uniforms. [… …   Wikipedia

  • Concordia Parish School Board — is a school district headquartered in unincorporated Concordia Parish, Louisiana, United States. The district serves residents of Concordia Parish. Contents 1 School uniforms 2 Schools 2.1 PreK 12 schools …   Wikipedia

  • St. Mary Parish School Board — is a school district headquartered in unincorporated St. Mary Parish, Louisiana, United States.The district serves St. Mary Parish.chool uniformsStudents are required to wear school uniforms. [ [http://www.stmary.k12.la.us/… …   Wikipedia

  • Terrebonne Parish School District — is a school district headquartered in unincorporated Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana, United States, adjacent to the city of Houma.The district serves residents in Terrebonne Parish.chool uniformsThe school district requires its PK 12 students to… …   Wikipedia

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