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Joseph A Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Vocabulary

Hello everyone,

A. In my country, in the primary schools or other schools students of the same grade cannot be fit in the same class room because they are outnumber, so they are divided into some groups, eg, "group A, group B, and group C" and them they are put in different classrooms. My question is: Can we call each group "branch" as follows?

branch A

branch B

branch C

B. Apart from "group", Are there any other ways to call them?

  

Top answer

Joseph A primary schools or other schools In this case it would be simpler to write this just as schools . Joseph A cannot be fit in It would be better to delete the second word. Joseph A clas s r oom Don't leave a space here.

  • Joseph A primary schools or other schools In this case it would be simpler to write this just as schools .
  • Joseph A cannot be fit in It would be better to delete the second word.
  • Joseph A clas s r oom Don't leave a space here.
  • Joseph A because they are outnumber, This is not good.
  • You could write it as because there are too many .
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3 Answers
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Joseph Aprimary schools or other schools

In this case it would be simpler to write this just as schools.

Joseph Acannot be fit in

It would be better to delete the second word.

Joseph Aclass room

Don't leave

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Joseph A My question is: Can we call each group "branch" as follows?

Around here (East Coast US), we call them classes, often by teacher's name. The third grade might comprise three classes—Mrs. Donovan's class, Miss Dugan's class and Ms Bluestocking's class.

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Joseph AB. Apart from "group", Are there any other ways to call them?

The word classes was mentioned in another reply. If in your context you mean that a grade is divided into classes, see the first definition here https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dicti

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