John's school went upto 10th class. After that he went to a different school

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tufguy

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John's school went upto 10th class. After that he went to a different school.


Can we say "John studied there upto tenth class and then went to different school"?
 
Please start by correcting the obvious spelling errors in your post.
 
Please start by correcting the obvious spelling errors in your post.
John's school went up to 10th class. After that he went to a different school.

Can we say "John studied there up to tenth class and then went to a different school"?
 
BrE would use "Year 10" and AmE would use "tenth grade". Does Indian English really refer to these as "class"?
 
@tufguy
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@tufguy
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10th class or grade.
 
John's school went up to 10th class. After that he went to a different school.

Can we say "John studied there up to tenth class and then went to a different school"?
BrE would use "Year 10" and AmE would use "tenth grade". Does Indian English really refer to these as "class"?
Are these correct?
 
BrE would use "Year 10" and AmE would use "tenth grade". Does Indian English really refer to these as "class"?
Is it correct to say "John studied up to fourth class and then quit studying"?
 
Not in AmE or BrE, as we've already pointed out.
Is it correct to say "John studied up to fourth grade and then quit studying"?
 
Yes, I think so, but more likely is something like the following.

John went to school through the fourth grade. Then he quit going to school. (Or he dropped out of school.)
 
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