[ noun ] a building where young people receive education <noun.artifact> the school was built in 1932he walked to school every morning
Schoolhouse \School"house`\, n. A house appropriated for the use of a school or schools, or for instruction.
Killed in the fire at the converted schoolhouse were Kimberly, her mother, father and 10-year-old brother, her four cousins and two neighbor children.
Maria Gumercinda Melendez, 28, said she and her daughter Blanca were walking to the nearby town of San Sebastian Wednesday when they were detained by the troopers and held in the schoolhouse all day.
Gov. Wallace, in his dining room, vows to "stand in the schoolhouse door."
They love and support their one-room schoolhouse." Rival black leaders Nelson Mandela and Mangosuthu Buthelezi on Wednesday urged an end to fighting that has claimed 124 lives.
Only the municipal building _ an old one-room schoolhouse _ and the rescue squad garage are still owned by the township.
Janet Mondlane, educated in a one-room schoolhouse near Downer's Grove, Ill., was 17 and dreaming of becoming a doctor in Africa when she met an African revolutionary at a summer church camp.
A 136-year-old, one-room schoolhouse is headed for a new life as a museum after it gathered dust on a farm for most of this century.
The space schoolhouse concluded with astronauts Ron Parise and Robert Parker fielding questions from the students on Earth.
They said different soldiers who addressed the detainees in the schoolhouse accused the villagers of supporting the front.
The tabs fill a large wooden bin on the second floor, spill down the stairways and litter the yard of the 1920s red brick schoolhouse in this town northeast of Walla Walla.
Gonzalez hears jury trials at the schoolhouse, but that isn't very often.