Whereas the British want to see children's faces light up with joy, those foreign johnnies prefer to scare the living daylights out of them. |
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True, Dwarves provided comic relief in The Hobbit but that was originally written as a children's book and not as a 'serious' work. |
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The family patriarch makes all decisions regarding living arrangements, children's marriages, and money. |
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Through reading the Harry Potter series, it would seem many want to enter children's imaginary fantasy lands, too. |
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The variety of language used at home and school has a direct bearing on children's literacy. |
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Small mercury batteries inside remote controls can be easily swallowed so keep these out of children's reach as well. |
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The choir gave a beautiful rendering of hymns to celebrate this special occasion in the children's lives. |
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Unbelievable, though, there is a restaurant here, set in the woods, rustic and jolly, with a view and a children's plastic slide. |
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To all those parents and teachers that think it's cute and educational to have pets in children's classrooms, listen up! |
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When he wrote his memoirs late in life, he recalled that this father had been a children's book writer. |
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We were surprised at the response as well as the children's latent talents. |
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My husband laughs at me because I put our children's clothes on the radiator to warm in winter but it is a habit I picked up from my mother. |
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Perrault's fables were much reprinted and adapted by the Victorians into children's picture books, burlesque, and pantomime. |
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Rather, inadequate phonological information is available for a greater proportion of such children's lexical entries. |
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Another article discussed children's stress before taking their final primary school examinations or termly tests. |
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Broadcasters could do a feature on children's perspective of daily news and create children's news bulletins. |
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Bacon has successfully revived his career after allegations of drug use ended his run on children's television. |
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The Orkney Museum's latest items include models of a Viking longship and a sailing ship as well as children's toys and domestic artefacts. |
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From household articles to children's toys and leather products to paper creations, there are products for every purse and taste. |
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Its laboratories have already copied some examples for use in children's lollipops. |
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Add to this lots of audience participation and you've got a colourful, memorable and interactive children's show. |
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Dentists approve of children's electric toothbrushes because they clean well, but even so, a parent should do the brushing. |
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The bazaar will feature Middle Eastern entertainment, children's entertainers, a rummage sale, a silent auction and food. |
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Free brochures are available on children's safety, life jackets, rules of the road, weather, hypothermia, and alcohol and boating. |
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Dry Weetbix, children's rusks and Berocca were just some of the substances the iron men and women of Tindal had to swallow. |
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I am having trouble structuring an argument which assuages my children's disappointment on this one. |
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Most children's seizures treated with anticonvulsants are controlled by the first drug selected. |
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The film tells of the children's escape and how they follow the rabbit-proof fence across a blistering desert. |
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The two storey, 16,000 sq ft showroom caters for all ages and tastes, with separate sections for road bikes, children's bikes and mountain bikes. |
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There was a dusty children's playground at one end of the park, but the middle was dense with tall sycamore-maples and lindens. |
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It is disgusting how anti-American rubbish is now being spewed out by certain children's comic books. |
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The accomplished author has also written three children's books and published two anthologies. |
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Low, built-in shelving provides appealing wall storage for young children's toys. |
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Now what can be so 'incredible' about a collection of children's lotto games? |
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Three TV cameras catch all the action, be it the sermon, a choir anthem or a children's message. |
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The use of anonyms and pseudonyms is a well-known phenomenon in literature, not least children's literature. |
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In the bedroom, a blue, quilted, cotton throw from Nest is cool and fresh and Freedom's spot rugs look great in the children's and rumpus room. |
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Grammar is just a natural function of children's brains, and they apply it to whatever they find. |
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The whole film strays dangerously close to anodyne children's television fare at this stage. |
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One of the most popular children's entertainment was the army assault course. |
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Geraldine Gibson of Sleights, whom Freshwater helped with children's donkey rides, had taken pity on him after he asked her for help. |
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While boys were associated with roughness, the typical hero of a children's book embodied tenderness, refinement, and restraint. |
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As a result, families are now bearing the main responsible for their children's education, particularly with regard to the financial aspects. |
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Popular children's books included annuals, yearly bound books of stories, such as the Rupert Annuals or Chums Annuals. |
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The Children's Book Shelf stocks nothing but children's books, old annuals and comics. |
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Representatives from various associated agencies and courts from around the country concerned with children's welfare were in attendance. |
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The council has refused to throw a lifeline to a children's football club facing bankruptcy. |
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The LA website supports the work of local authorities in driving through the education and children's services reform agenda. |
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It's a well made children's line and is cut on the big size for plenty of wear. |
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It sits on a stretch of grass between a Plunket rooms and a children's play park. |
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Only last autumn, the new 12A category was introduced to give parents more leeway and say in their children's cinema viewing. |
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Books old and new, bargain books, children's books and a large representation of antiquarian books will be for sale. |
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It still gives the Minister of Aboriginal Affairs authority over aboriginal children's education. |
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He eventually found a position performing in a children's theatre group and was offered walk-on roles in local T.V. commercials. |
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Here is a government made up largely of men who have spent huge periods of time almost completely absent from their children's lives. |
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According to company officials, they are ideal for children's rooms and living rooms. |
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Who is it that decides which novels, biographies, poetry and children's books do get published? |
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The twin bedroom is particularly charming and is now a children's room with nursery rhyme wallpaper and decorative features. |
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The pace is languid and events too abstract to be a children's movie, yet corny stunts alienate mature viewers. |
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Verbs and adjectives are more abstract, and so are more difficult concepts for children's minds to grasp. |
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This absurdist children's comedy starred the standup comic as a pizza delivery man. |
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All parents care deeply about their children's education and academic progress. |
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Her animation and liveliness engaged her young students, as evidenced by the children's laughter and high degree of participation. |
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An emphasis on the family is important to assist parents in supporting their children's grieving process. |
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At one end of the spectrum is the provision of a children's playground and at the other sourcing a site for a new burial ground. |
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Follow these steps to ensure that your children's future isn't a question mark. |
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Sir Ian is currently working on the animated film version of the classic children's animation series The Magic Roundabout. |
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When we limit our children's access to television, we also limit corporate predators' access to our children. |
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Two weeks later Clare was moved to a children's home and we didn't see her any more. |
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To add to the excitement, a children's entertainer, competitions, quizzes and refreshments were included in the morning's entertainment. |
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The restaurateur said he was impressed by the children's knowledge of food and of fish, which he admitted, rather surprised him. |
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The hallways are lined with children's work, including stories, weather charts, and other projects they have produced. |
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The day kicked off at noon with a number of children's events, including several races and potato-and-spoon time trials. |
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We're going to act like normal, mature adults and choose normal children's names. |
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And we thought what we'd try and do is use children's interest in the Internet and in computers as a strategy to get them more physically active. |
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Finally, the Lexical Decision test is a measure of children's right-left spatial reversals of Chinese radicals. |
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The children's tiny fingers are perfect for manipulating the weft items through the warp strings. |
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One lot is a collection of children's annuals, including first editions of Enid Blyton books and an 1870 copy of John Bunyan's Choice Works. |
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In March, 2001, the father moved for interim joint custody with the children's primary residence to be with him. |
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On-board entertainment including the relentlessly jolly children's club and the cabaret kept us busy until bedtime. |
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The agency said the decision was taken to ensure the children's safety and welfare. |
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The special children's raffle was most exciting, the draws supervised by the officer board ensured that everything was above board. |
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The three children's playtime was interrupted as an exhausted and ragged looking lady barged out from the bushes. |
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He robbed a car of children's Christmas presents because he was terrified of the guy who put him up to it. |
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More than 150 jubilant residents clapped and cheered as plans to build homes on a children's play area were thrown out. |
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Thieves raided a children's activity centre and stole hundreds of pounds and six computers. |
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Careful listening enhances children's learning of a song, rhythm or complete musical piece. |
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Combined with children's play areas and acres of space, it's a lovely place to spend a lazy sunny afternoon. |
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The children's 8pm mass of the Lord's supper is followed by adoration of the cross until 11 pm. |
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The restriction of adulterine children's inheritance rights is the subject of much criticism. |
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Leopold understood all this early in his children's lives, and used the knowledge to advantage. |
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Women are more likely to take responsibility for daily and routine money management and ensure that children's needs are met. |
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Another children's service was held on Christmas Eve at St George's Anglican Church. |
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Ten years later, the two women meet at their children's school and find that they have a natural affinity for one another. |
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Playing video games, including violent shooters, may boost children's learning, health and social skills, according to a review. |
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I knew people like Liam in the children's home, it gives me a fresher angle on him than most have. |
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Following a few white lies about his TV experience, Andy was offered the job as presenter on a live children's show. |
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Two-thirds of the shop's books are Africana, plus modern first editions, and children's and illustrated books. |
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Collectors have documented children's lore for centuries, often to record what they considered a dying culture. |
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Hearing of that strange adventure the children's eager faces glowed with delight and excitement. |
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The shelters will provide seating for the youngsters so they can socialise away from children's playgrounds and residential areas. |
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Their parents, too, reported that the children's oral health problems kept them from playing with other kids and disrupted their sleep. |
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Figures published last week showed alarming gaps in children's ability to read and write. |
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To reduce levels of aggression and violence in children's lives and build peaceful societies. |
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The theory of reparation grew from clinical observations of children's distress at their own aggressiveness. |
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It will go down in history and our children's children will remember these departed colleagues of ours. |
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Notably, Hamilton was one of the most influential figures in children's literature in the 20th century. |
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As mentioned, the parties filed an agreed statement of facts as to the children's residence and expenses. |
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Keen dancers are being urged to support a charity event in aid of a children's cancer unit. |
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We have recently seen many important educational policy initiatives in the area of children's literacy. |
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Months of suffering at children's hands drove a young householder to fire an air rifle into a street of youngsters, York magistrates heard. |
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In addition, the passenger lounge and children's play area will be redesigned and all new seats will be added. |
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Current studies challenge the idea that limiting recess will benefit children's academic performance, however. |
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However, with the increasing phase-out of leaded petrol, levels of lead in children's blood are expected to rapidly decline. |
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They regard it as part of their maternal duty that their children's appearance shall act as a letter of recommendation when they leave the house. |
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Early exposure to fatty food could reconfigure children's bodies so that they always choose fatty foods. |
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Research has found that long, lazy summer holidays could be putting children's literacy skills at risk. |
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The children's cough symptoms were recorded daily by the parents into diaries. |
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From 1994, it started to recruit children systematically and even created children's regiments. |
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To be fair, things had been looking up on the children's story front before Dahl arrived. |
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Items at the garage sale include clothes, furniture, children's toys, household items, kitchenware, bric-a-brac, indoor plants and lots more. |
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There is a superb children's programme that covers everything from kite-flying to karting. |
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Darwen children will be putting their best foot forward to raise money for Barnardo's children's charity. |
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Many are, in fact, wonderstruck, when they speak of their children's ability to keenly observe things. |
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Teachers managed to save children's work at St Nicholas Primary School, but the building was knee-deep in water and remained closed last night. |
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On display now at schools throughout Pattaya are works produced by children based on the theme of children's rights. |
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Beautifully worked stitches feature in many examples of white work in children's dresses and gowns. |
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In addition, psychology has the scientific knowledge base to help shape policies on children's mental health. |
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These products are household items such as kitchen appliances, gardening tools and children's toys. |
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Toys such as fire trucks, ambulances, building blocks, puppets and dolls encourage play reenactment of children's experiences and observations. |
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Education officers claim the scheme offers the best of both worlds and has the most flexibility to meet children's needs. |
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The main table in Martin's office was once the refectory table of a Barnardo's children's home. |
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But it was an invitation to help out at a children's tournament which triggered her interest in refereeing. |
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After joining the service in 1966, Mrs Lord has worked in the central children's library, the reference library and has been a branch librarian. |
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Lots of our referrals come from health visitors, professionals, social services and children's centres. |
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Tiny hands forming tiny people out of cereal, foil wrap or paper clips, illustrate the size of children's personally improvised art. |
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Authoritative parents respect children's individualism while insisting they meet reasonable requirements. |
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Far from being proof of children's linguistic inadequacy, analogy is a demonstration of their mastery of the core rules of English morphology. |
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Today, Dave is a lobster fisherman, while Maureen is both a fisher and a writer of short stories, novels, poetry, and children's literature. |
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Further, we found a severe lack of Latino children's literature in the libraries and classrooms of schools in this study. |
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Volunteer your family's time by helping out at a children's hospital or homeless shelter or building or refurbishing housing for people in need. |
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In some parts of the country, where children's parties are big business, youngsters can leave with lavish gifts. |
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Doctors explained that children's nerves and muscles have strong regenerative abilities, and the girl should be able to walk in the future. |
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It's great that you are re-gifting your children's overflow birthday items to a worthy cause. |
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Nowadays, adults, particularly in the upper middle classes, are less laissez-faire about children's social lives. |
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But it is the children's box of tricks that seems most emblematic of her surprise resignation. |
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Unlike most books, children's books have to read well aloud, and Pooh is a delight to read aloud. |
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Queen Elizabeth laments the death of Edward and fears for her children's safety. |
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For the capital's alpha toddlers, children's charity parties have become the events to see and be seen. |
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The Doll's House is furnished like a bright children's nursery, with colourful walls and shelves brimming with old annuals, teddies and spinning tops. |
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It was quite nice to begin with but after a few years it became neglected and the vandals moved in, smashing down arbours, trees, the children's play area and the sports hut. |
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This has occurred with bean bag chairs, children's sweaters, and the Coco The Monkey Teething Toy. |
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It can do much to alleviate children's pessimism about future prospects of happiness if they have godparents who are still jogging on cosily together. |
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They are one of the country's leading manufacturers of children's clothing. |
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For instance, complaints from teachers about their children's conduct were prominent for the externalizing groups as were grievances from the children's age-mates. |
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It is a simple naming task with pictures from a children's lotto. |
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And for the child with a discerning palate, not only were there the usual children's dishes but small portions of items on the main menu could be rustled up on request. |
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Christmas bazaars are meant to be where you purchase, among other things, cheap knick-knacks for putting in children's stockings for Christmas day. |
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Stone, the relative, and the children's caregiver were sued for negligence and wrongful death. |
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A wave of hands suddenly rose high in the air as each one moved about in erratic and unpredictable movements, each as unique as the children's personality. |
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At the top of the building, the glass roof of the children's shower can be opened at the touch of a switch for open-air ablutions or access to a rooftop terrace. |
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The containers include nearly 6,000 quilts, more than 3 tons of children's clothing, 3,000 sewing kits, 6,000 health kits, 8,200 school kits and 4,000 layettes. |
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You wouldn't ask a children's illustrator to be a war artist. |
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Unlike Binet, Piaget came to believe that the key to understanding children's cognitive development was not which questions children got wrong, but how they got them wrong. |
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In one, a father is upset that his children's clothes are made out of curtains. |
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The second grave in the children's burial plot has been fenced off into a shrine and personalised with a pot cherub, dried flowers and child's handheld windmill. |
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Of course, restaurateurs aren't trying to undermine children's health. |
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This anthropophagous king will haunt our children's imaginations. |
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The collection also features world maps, and includes atlases, globes, school geographies, maritime charts, and a variety of pocket, wall, children's, and manuscript maps. |
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The news was welcomed by Jan Brown, of Little Jems, the award-winning nursery and children's shop, in Newcastle Emlyn, which sells hand-crafted rocking horses. |
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Joan, who has worked at Blackburn Royal Infirmary since 1987 and on the children's surgical ward for the last nine years, said she was shocked but delighted by her windfall. |
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On top of this, more than 23,000 people, many from the North Cotswolds, have signed petitions in support of the Battledown children's ward in Cheltenham. |
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Her 'Three Craws' harks back to a children's song in auld lowlands Scots. |
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Mrs Thompson has spent more than 80 years working tirelessly for the Blackpool community both as a Justice of the Peace and leading children's charity worker. |
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The NCC should be easily accessible to children and should have in-built mechanisms like toll-free phone lines and the presence of children's friends. |
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Make sure you keep oil of wintergreen out of children's reach. |
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The couple, who moved to York 51 years ago when Frank got a job as a station inspector, have celebrated each of their three children's ruby weddings. |
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Similar picturesque thatched cottages with lattice windows are illustrated in the children's picture sheets issued by early nineteenth-century publishers. |
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Many museums do not charge for entry and really come up trumps in the school holidays with imaginative programmes of children's events that combine fun and learning. |
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Board games are also seen as helpful to children's development, able to increase confidence and social skills and a great antidote to the stress of modern life. |
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If your child seems uncomfortable from the fever, ask the doctor if you can give him or her infant's or children's acetaminophen or ibuprofen to help reduce it. |
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Only this week, two would-be asylum-seekers were caught miles from the French mainland as they tried to use children's lilos to paddle their way across the English Channel. |
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At the field there were lots more old-fashioned amusements, including two children's roundabouts, a coconut shy, splat the rat and pillow jousting. |
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This eight-week program trains parents to be active participants and advocates in their children's education and to share these skills as community liaisons. |
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He refolded his nets and took them upstairs into the children's room where he stored them in padlocked wooden trunk along with various other poaching implements. |
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By instituting these programs, we hope to improve our children's education. |
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I'm currently on leave, so I should obviously be using all this spare time renewing my acquaintance with children's telly, particularly if it's getting this risque. |
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Think of it as one of those lucky dips from a children's Halloween party. |
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What happens when the Soviet Union appropriates one of the most beloved characters in children's literature? |
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There are also two-days of intensive workshops in flamenco rhythms, singing, guitar, children's Spanish, rumba, castanette playing, men's flamenco and much more. |
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I believe that reading children's pictorial books that depict the ancestry of different continents with children can make global education meaningful. |
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I cut my teeth on a series of children's interactive storybook webtoons. |
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Illegal immigrants have secured important roles from a hospital children's nurse and a radiographer to a police IT contractor. |
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Their latest movie is a modern version of a classic children's story. |
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The grass was so green that it looked like the artificial Easter bunny grass that Dory had bought each year to fill her children's baskets with. |
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The report for 1909 showed that 42 per cent. of the children's months were defective dentitionally. |
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The children's slide had a spirally helicine shape I had never seen before. |
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The rights listed in the UNCRC cover all areas of children's lives such as their right to have a home and their right to be educated. |
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Money promised for children's mental health services is not reaching frontline services and instead is being used to offset cuts elsewhere. |
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The Early Years Education and Childcare Service of Sheffield City Council manages 32 nurseries and children's centres in the city. |
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There are interactive events and family activities at the Countryside Centre and a comprehensive children's play area. |
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In the 1940s, Beveridge credited the Eugenics Society with promoting the children's allowance, which was incorporated into his 1942 report. |
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Recent developments include Cornish music, independent films, and children's books. |
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The results of the exam would be used to match children's secondary schools to their abilities and future career needs. |
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Enid Blyton wrote a number of children's books with pixies as featured characters. |
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Children's editions of the garlands were produced and in 1820 a children's edition of Ritson's Robin Hood collection. |
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With the help of Friar Laurence, who hopes to reconcile the two families through their children's union, they are secretly married the next day. |
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The families are reconciled by their children's deaths and agree to end their violent feud. |
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Godwin, which sold children's books as well as stationery, maps, and games. |
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She had a governess, a daily tutor, and read many of her father's children's books on Roman and Greek history in manuscript. |
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Of more weight are Belloc's Sonnets and Verses, a volume that deploys the same singing and rhyming techniques of his children's verses. |
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Lord Amberley consented to his wife's affair with their children's tutor, the biologist Douglas Spalding. |
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His children's stories remain popular, and his Jungle Books have been made into several movies. |
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The Chronicles of Narnia is a series of seven fantasy novels for children and is considered a classic of children's literature. |
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She was not so keen on all the academic subjects but excelled in writing, and in 1911 she entered Arthur Mee's children's poetry competition. |
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Similarly, the novel Mrs McGinty's Dead is named after a children's game that is explained in the course of the novel. |
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Rowling collaborated with Sarah Brown to write a book of children's stories to aid One Parent Families. |
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An inflatable representation of Lord Voldemort and other children's literary characters accompanied her reading. |
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The earliest vernacular children's songs in Europe are lullabies from the later medieval period. |
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From soon after we have records of short children's rhyming songs, but most nursery rhymes were not written down until the 18th century. |
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The oldest children's songs of which we have records are lullabies, intended to help a child sleep. |
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From the later Middle Ages there are records of short children's rhyming songs, often as marginalia. |
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The rhyme is often used in a children's singing game, which exists in a wide variety of forms, with additional verses. |
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He returned to Aldeburgh in August, and wrote Welcome Ode for children's choir and orchestra. |
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He has also composed the music for the children's television series Titch which is based on the books written and illustrated by Pat Hutchins. |
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The children's prom of 2011 was based on the CBBC television series 'Horrible Histories', and featured a number of songs from the show. |
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In addition to acting, Winslet has narrated documentaries and children's books. |
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Prolific children's author Enid Blyton chronicled the adventures of a group of young children and their dog in The Famous Five. |
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The book Alice in Wonderland failed to be named in an 1888 poll of the most popular children's stories. |
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The sequel consists of four short stories by four leading children's authors, Kate Saunders, Brian Sibley, Paul Bright, and Jeanne Willis. |
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During the 1970s the BBC children's television show Jackanory serialised the two books, which were read by Willie Rushton. |
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One of the best known characters in British children's literature, a 2011 poll saw Winnie the Pooh voted onto the list of icons of England. |
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Hatton is a supporter of The Village News, Haughton Green's local children's newspaper made by children in aid of charity. |
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Moss also narrated the popular children's series Roary the Racing Car, which stars Peter Kay. |
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A young Faroese person is normally handed down a set of children's Faroese clothes that have passed from generation to generation. |
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Parents are frequently not consulted over children's medication and frequently feel unable to challenge decisions over their child's treatment. |
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Known for his macabre, darkly comic, fantasy children's books, Roald Dahl is frequently ranked the best children's author in UK polls. |
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A pioneer of children's publishing, John Newbery made children's literature a sustainable and profitable part of the literary market. |
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There is large tennis centre with indoor and outdoor courts, a children's cycle track, play area and a grass boules lawn. |
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Momzillas are mothers whose lives are defined by their children, and more specifically, by their children's accomplishments. |
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The first children's radio station, Takeover Radio, broadcasts in Leicester. |
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Some of the factors include their daily presence in their children's lives. |
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His final appearance in one of his own plays was as the Crimson Gollywog in the disastrous children's play Christmas v Mastermind. |
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His first children's book was The Gremlins, published in 1943, about mischievous little creatures that were part of Royal Air Force folklore. |
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Dahl's children's works are usually told from the point of view of a child. |
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In surveys of UK teachers, parents and students, Dahl is frequently ranked the best children's writer. |
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In April 1929, Barrie gave the copyright of the Peter Pan works to Great Ormond Street Hospital, a leading children's hospital in London. |
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The problems are perhaps epitomised by Roald Dahl, a writer of short stories and children's literature. |
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We'd better put nametags in the children's school uniforms, in case they get mixed up. |
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One study found that improving children's social skills increases their turnout as adults. |
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Pets appear often on children's memorials and in literature, including birds, dogs, cats, goats, sheep, rabbits and geese. |
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The Secular Ode of Horace, commissioned by Augustus, was performed publicly in 17 BC by a mixed children's choir. |
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Giant parrots nibbled seed from the children's fingertips and my sister peeled a couple of satsumas for the lemurs. |
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The next year, Manson was one of the final guests to appear on the cult US children's show Pancake Mountain. |
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Issue A14 of the Ofcom Advertising Complaints bulletin reports that the children's response to their mother's claim was not offensive. |
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The other most salient fact about children's maintenance activities is the sheer amount of time spent in nonmeal eating. |
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Charles set precedent by being the first royal father to be present at his children's births. |
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In 1984, he read his children's book The Old Man of Lochnagar for the BBC's Jackanory series. |
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Appearing since ancient times in the literatures of many cultures, it is characteristic of nursery rhymes and children's song. |
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The Mint received over 30,000 entries with a further 17,000 from a children's competition on Blue Peter. |
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This is Ruthin's main park area, which includes a children's play area, a lake, walks and picnic area. |
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He also appears as the chief bard of the Kingdom of Prydain in the children's novels of Lloyd Alexander which are based on the Welsh Mabinogion. |
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Jones exhibited artistic promise at an early age, even entering his drawings into exhibitions of children's artwork. |
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The Waterworld indoor swimming complex on Festival Park near Hanley is also a significant children's attraction. |
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When living in Cardiff as a child, the famous children's author Roald Dahl attended this church. |
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Many characters in the 1983 children's cartoon, The Adventures of Portland Bill are named after features mentioned in the Shipping Forecast. |
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I saw a strong emotional content that would carry with little children's experiences with life. |
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Various aspects of the war were also common in contemporary children's fiction. |
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An Elm Tree and Three Sisters is a children's book about three young sisters that plant a small elm tree in their backyard. |
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Daisies have traditionally been used for making daisy chains in children's games. |
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From the children's point of view, this ball's path is curved sideways by the Coriolis force. |
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With access to gold or to gold dust, the Quitamdeiras were able to purchase the freedom of their children's and their own. |
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The Manitoba Children's Museum is a nonprofit children's museum located at The Forks that features twelve permanent galleries. |
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These include the Prince's Dressing Room, the Queen's Sitting Room, the Queen's Bedroom, and the children's nurseries. |
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The 1980 Christmas special of the ITV children's show Worzel Gummidge was filmed in the town during the summer of that year. |
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Sandown Pier hosts a large amusement centre with arcade games and children's play areas, typical of a seaside resort. |
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Tomson Highway, CM is a Canadian and Cree playwright, novelist, and children's author, who was born in a remote area north of Brochet, Manitoba. |
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I desire that you give the woman, Pateria, forty solidi for the children's shoes and forty bushels of grain. |
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In an extended family, parents and their children's families may often live under a single roof. |
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Galicia has a long established Rugby Federation that organises its own women's, children's and men's leagues. |
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Maize kernels can be used in place of sand in a sandboxlike enclosure for children's play. |
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Perhaps the most known children's book set in Venice is The Thief Lord, written by the German author Cornelia Funke. |
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This allows people to buy consumer goods, improve their health care, and provide for their children's education. |
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In this sense, child, children, child's and children's are four different words in the English lexicon. |
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Moreover, since a lexis is a way of calling, different words such as child, children, child's and children's may realise the same lexical item. |
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He currently lives in Holyhead with his wife, a former speech therapist and now children's author. |
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A children's slide was used to deliver books from the street into the large crypt. |
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Women's earnings, assets, body mass index, and their children's schooling and body mass index all improve with greater access to birth control. |
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This move was lauded by UNICEF as a welcome attempt to secure children's rights in the country. |
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Adults may use recasts to suggest corrections to mistakes in children's speech. |
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Irish parents felt that it was the children's duty to carry out chores on the family farm. |
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The village was the inspiration for the fictional village of Greendale in the classic children's television series Postman Pat. |
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The first children's railway was opened Moscow in 1932, and at the breakup of the USSR, 52 children's railways existed in the country. |
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In her thirties, Potter published the highly successful children's book, The Tale of Peter Rabbit. |
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It was Annie who later suggested that these letters might make good children's books. |
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In 1992, Potter's famous children's book The Tale of Benjamin Bunny was featured in the film Lorenzo's Oil. |
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Potter eventually went on to publish 23 children's books, and became a wealthy woman. |
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It underwent a major refurbishment in 2003 and is currently used by The Exchange, children's playgroups and keep fit classes. |
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The house was once the home of children's author and illustrator Beatrix Potter who left it to the National Trust. |
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Hill Top once belonged to Beatrix Potter, the children's author and illustrator known for the series of small format Peter Rabbit books. |
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