schoole

schoole

(ʃəʊl)
n
an archaic form of shoal1
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in classic literature ?
"When he went to schoole, when he was very young," we are told, "he studied hard and sate up very late: commonly till twelve or one at night.
PUBLISHERS: HOW TO NOMINATE YOUR BOOKS FOR VOYA'S NEXT TOP SHELF FICTION FOR MIDDLE SCHOOLE READERS
A perspectiva politica da Carnegie Schoole mais tarde integrada as nocoes derivadas da teoria da dependencia de recursos (resource dependence theory), proposta por Pfeffer (1981), na qual a enfase se concentra no papel do poder como mecanismo dos individuos de superarem resistencias para alcancarem determinados objetivos.
(1) Schoole of Automobile, Changan University, Xi'an 710064, China
(24) John Brinsley, LudusLiterarius: Or, the Grammar Schoole (London, 1612; STC: 3768), G3v.
(2) Samuel van Hoogstraten, Inleyding tot de hooghe schoole der schilderkonst: anders de zichtbaere werelt (Rotterdam: By Fransois van Hoogstraeten, 1678), p.
(11.) The schoole of abuse (London: 1579), D3v-D4r.
immorality in The Schoole of Abuse (1579), to which Thomas Lodge also
I have chosen for analysis a popular manual of proper conduct for young boys, entitled The Schoole of Vertue (henceforth The Schoole), issued in several editions between 1582 and 1687 by various London publishers.
Furthermore, the parson, so far from being a jumped-up autocrat, ensures that his servants should not be kept in ignorance, but should be educated and made literate, and thus "Those that can read, are allowed times for it, and those that cannot, are taught; for all in his house are either teachers or learners, or both, so that his family is a Schoole of Religion, and they all account, that to teach the ignorant is the greatest almes" (WGH 240).