Đồng nghĩa với head to somewhere head to somewhere means going to a destination, example: We plan to head to New York City. this means that they plan to go to New York City and that New York is their destination. I do not think that 'head for somewhere' is grammatically correct, because I have only come across 'head to somewhere'. Trang chủ / Khác / head to là gì. Quà tặng: Học tập online từ KTCITY đang khuyến mãi đến 90%. Chỉ còn lại 1 ngày. Head to là gì HEAD BANGING Tiếng việt là gì - trong Tiếng việt Dịch đập đầu Ví dụ về sử dụng Head banging trong một câu và bản dịch của họ Hand flapping and head banging. Tay vặn và đầu bits. Her most recent video- a head banging repeatedly against a keyboard- is to help argue on the internet. Video gần đây nhất của cô- một đầu đập nhiều lần so với một bàn phím- Các bạn đang xem chủ đề về : "Head Off Là Gì - Thành Ngữ Với 'Head' Những Thành Ngữ" Ý nói: nếu ai đó "bite your head off", người ấy đang nói chuyện với bạn 1 cách rất giận dữ và nói rất nhanh bởi vì người ta đang khó chịu hoặc lo lắng về chuyện nào đó Ví du: "-Are you ready to go?-She asked -Does it look like it?-He shouted Đối với từ Headteacher, có thể thấy được từ head có tính từ là để chỉ tính chất đứng đầu, thành phần quan trọng, chính yếu, đầu tiên tại một nơi nào đó hoặc một hoàn cảnh nào đó. Nếu xét về danh từ, từ head dùng để gọi những người đứng đầu, những người chủ nhiệm, thủ cấp, hoặc bộ phận đầu. Ví dụ như từ Headache dùng để chỉ cơn đau đầu, nhức đầu. Tra cứu từ điển Anh Việt online. Nghĩa của từ 'head home' trong tiếng Việt. head home là gì? Tra cứu từ điển trực tuyến. aizeP. In a move that has outraged parents, teachers and students, the York Catholic board will not fly the Pride flag outside of its main office in June — a decision the province has no plans to Mayr has been a teacher with York Catholic District School Board for 23 years and is the parent of a transgender child, who went to a school she taught at. She feels “utterly ashamed” to be a part of a system that made this decision.“It seems to be a worldwide movement of hatred that has just infiltrated school boards, including our own,” she said. While her son has now graduated, Mayr used to feel like he was safe with her advocating behind the scenes.“If he was here today, in this climate, I would not feel the same way,” Mayr said. “I know of parents who had to pull their children out of our school system. I think that is a travesty.”“I can’t believe that a Catholic school, a Catholic system can stand by and allow that to continue to happen.”Education Minister Stephen Lecce said he is disappointed with the board’s decision but stopped short of forcing them to reverse to reporters at Queen’s Park Tuesday afternoon, Lecce said he expects boards to support LGBTQ+ students by raising the flag or holding events, and noted other Catholic boards already showcase the flag outside their headquarters or schools.“I’ve expressed my disappointment with the decision” by the board, Lecce said, but did not directly answer questions as to why he isn’t going to order trustees to change course.“We have been clear and consistent since this issue first arose,” Lecce also said. “Our message to children in our schools, particularly the LGBTQ+, is that we see them, we value them and we are proud as a government to stand with them. Every child in a publicly funded school should be supported, should feel affirmed and should feel safe.”Trustees at the York Catholic District School Board — which serves Lecce’s King-Vaughan riding — voted 6-4 Monday night against flying the flag at its education centre during June, which is Pride month. The motion they voted on was specific to its main office, and did not include any board has a long-standing policy that allows only the Canadian flag to be flown on school properties; however, a gender, sexuality and Catholic education committee had recommended that the rainbow flag be raised at the head office in committee’s report noted that “would be consistent with the pastoral mission of the Catholic Church,” wouldn’t undermine Catholic teachings and would be supportive of board chair Frank Alexander told reporters that trustees were advised by Cardinal Thomas Collins Archbishop Emeritus of Toronto and the Archbishop of London that the flags don’t “align with our Catholic values.”“That’s fundamentally why I voted against it,” he said, noting schools that fly the flag would face said the board supports LGBTQ+ students and “we do have a safe place, there are some things we need to fix, and certainly we will do that.”Paolo De Buono, a Catholic teacher in another board who advocates for LGBTQ+ inclusion in Catholic schools, worries this decision might prompt school boards that currently raise the flag to reconsider their decision. De Buono was at the Monday night meeting and was seated near a former YCDSB student who after the vote began shaking, had difficulty standing and appeared to be having “a breakdown,” noting “My sense is that they felt erased.” The flag ban sparked controversy among students, staff and parents — and at Queen’s Park, the opposition New Democrats pressed the issue.“Suicide is the lead cause of death for young people and that number is multiplied many times for the 2SLGBT community” and there continues to be a number of concerning hate-related incidents “and yet this government remains silent,” said New Democrat MPP Kristyn MPP Chandra Pasma, her party’s education critic, said under the minister’s proposed Bill 98, the Better Schools and Student Outcomes Act, Lecce is “more than happy to dictate rules and practices to school boards when it involves funding that he’s not providing, like on mental health and reading and math.”“Here’s something the minister could do that would actually protect kids, that doesn’t require any resources and suddenly he’s powerless to act?” she said at Queen’s Park. She asked why Lecce doesn’t “simply direct all schools in Ontario to fly the Pride flag?”In a memo to school board chairs sent late Tuesday afternoon, Lecce said all publicly funded schools “must be safe spaces for all children, regardless of race, heritage, faith, sexuality, and gender.”He added that “recognizing that many 2SLGBTQ+ students face increasing levels of bullying, harassment, and mental health issues, it is my expectation that school boards will redouble their efforts to protect these students and ensure their inclusion within Ontario schools,” he said in the memo, obtained by the month, which starts Thursday, must be celebrated “in a constructive, positive and meaningful ways,” noted Lecce. Last month, former premier Kathleen Wynne — the province’s first openly gay leader — took to social media to criticize Lecce saying he “can’t have it both ways” and urged him to “take a stand.”On Tuesday, she posted that the YCDSB’s move “is a cowardly, shameful decision. It emboldens and validates homophobia and transphobia.”Although some have demanded the government order the board to fly the flag, under the constitution Catholic schools are guaranteed control over non-denominational issues. York Catholic trustees Theresa McNicol, Maria Iafrate, Joseph DiMeo, Angela Saggese, Michaela Barbieri and chair Alexander voted against the flag trustees Elizabeth Crowe, Jennifer Wigston, Angela Grella and Carol Cotton supported the motion, which was put forth by student trustees Anthea Peta-Dragos and Jonah James, although the students’ votes don’t officially count. James said the final decision was a “slap in the face” to students, whose voices weren’t heard. Initially, he and Peta-Dragos wanted the flag raised at all schools within the district, but lowered their expectations to just the Catholic Education Centre, for the month of June. RELATED STORIES“The fact that even that didn’t pass is embarrassing,” James told the Star. “How can you support someone without acknowledging them?” Prior to the vote, trustees discussed the matter, with some saying they felt the flag was an empty gesture and others saying it would help students feel safe and teen Stephanie De Castro, the Catholic Board Council President for the Ontario Student Trustees’ Association, said “creating safe spaces” for 2SLGBTQ+ students should be a priority. “We’re really committed to ensuring that students’ leadership on this issue is heard and valued and we want to see progress continue,” she said, adding the association would like to see the Pride flag flown during June at all Catholic school board buildings, including a student at Toronto’s Catholic school board, which in June raises the Pride flag at all schools and main office, and says the move benefits the entire school community, by demonstrating the board’s commitment to a more inclusive York Catholic, Alexander was asked why the YCDSB is one of a few remaining boards that won’t fly the flag, and he said “what’s different about us is that we stand for our faith, we stand for Christ.”The committee’s report, however, said “our Catholicity calls us to be inclusive, compassionate, and empathetic. Pope Francis continues to urge all of us to welcome LGBTQ members into the church, to demonstrate tenderness, please, as God has for each one of us.’”PFLAG, an advocacy organization that supports LGBTQ+ youth, called the YCDSB “unsafe” for LGBTQ+ students, parents and community members seeking employment there.“It is kept unsafe by a group of York Catholic Board Trustees who weaponize their faith against marginalized communities,” said Tristan Coolman, president of the group’s York Region chapter, in a statement. Editor’s Note — June 1, 2023 This story was updated to name the two archbishops who said that the Pride flag does not “align with our Catholic values.”With files from Marissa BirnieJOIN THE CONVERSATION Anyone can read Conversations, but to contribute, you should be a registered Torstar account holder. If you do not yet have a Torstar account, you can create one now it is freeSign InRegisterConversations are opinions of our readers and are subject to the Code of Conduct. 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