School in Kensington and Chelsea, UK.
1You learn much more that way than by staying at the lycée.
2Young Jeannin was at the lycée; he said cheerfully that he was not a good scholar.
3Gradually, they started asking the lycée students for advice on traineeships or for help with a CV.
4Return by the Rue Cujas and Rue St. Jacques, passing the Lycée Ste.
5The Lycée competes formidably with the convents as regards fees.
6Massoud attended the Lycée Istiqlal, an elite, French-sponsored high school.
7My brother-in-law, M. Pelletier, had left Algiers, and was now Économe at the Lycée at Marseilles.
8Pelletier,-andthey went to live at Algiers, where he was then Commis d'Économat at the Lycée.
9He was educated in Paris at the Lycée Charlemagne, having gone there from Strasburg, where he was born.
10I taught English in the Lycée.'
11Three days later, his elder son Stephen started for Algiers, where he had an appointment at the Lycée.
12The family moved to the Pyrenees before Alain started school in the village of Labatut-Rivière, progressing to the lycée at Vic-en-Bigorre.
13In so far as was practicable, the Lycée for girls has been modelled on the plan of the time-honoured establishments for boys.
14The Lycée, on the high ground behind Issy, is being hurriedly formed into a fortress mounted with guns, earthworks connecting it with Vanves.
15So she never desisted from her importunity until she was permitted to become a pupil of Professor Coccherani, vocal instructor at the Lycée.
16Graduated, Bachelor of Sciences and of Letters, from the Lycée, Louis le Grand, the 5th of August, 1877.