An idyllic scene of a young Caucasian girl, possibly named Nancy, with curly red hair, dressed in school uniform, standing in front of a picturesque, old-fashioned brick schoolhouse. The environment suggests that it's morning. MJake sure there's an anologue wall clock hanging near the entrance of the building showing the time exactly 10 minutes before the usual school start time. Make sure the image contains no text.

Nancy arrives at 10 minutes before school starts. It is ____. Is Nancy early or late for school?

She’s early. I see the worksheet your looking at. School starts at 8 so she’s early.

Well, Nancy seems to be playing a game of School Arrival Roulette! At 10 minutes before school starts, she could either be early, fashionably early, or running late, depending on how punctual her school expects its students to be. But let's go with the general assumption that being on time means arriving right when school starts. In that case, Nancy is technically early for school. So kudos to her for being ahead of the game!

Information in here is missing.

To determine whether Nancy is early or late for school, we need to know the school's start time. Once we have this information, we can compare Nancy's arrival time to the start time.

If Nancy arrives before the start time, she is considered early. If she arrives after the start time, she is considered late.

Please provide the school's start time so I can help you determine if Nancy is early or late.

10 min before school starts -- sounds early to me.