The Little Red Hen is a story told in rhyme and is accompanied by lively songs to provide maximum enjoyment. The story consists of very basic vocabulary with a lot of repetition to help the pupils understand and reproduce it. The text appears for teachers and parents to read out the story to the pupils. There is also a Picture Dictionary. The story and the songs are recorded The teacher will also find the instrumental music of the songs in case he/she decides to out on an end-of-year performance.
Sporting fins, scales, and sometimes horns or fur, a riot of unidentifiable water creatures have poked their dripping heads above the waves throughout recorded history to shock grizzled sailors and hardy fisherfolk alike.
Edited by: stovokor - 29 March 2009
Reason: Image thumbnailed: please, do it yourself in the future according to mthe instructions in the Help file :)
The proverbs in this book are all genuine sayings collected from many cultures around the world. They are extracts from a number of proverb collections (many dating from the nineteenth century) compiled by various folklorists, linguists, social anthropologists and travellers.
This collection ignores the common sayings we’re all familiar with and concentrates on the more colourful, unusual and, in some cases, incomprehensible proverbs that have been recorded over the years.
Many of these sayings fall naturally into categories such as ‘Love and Marriage’ or ‘The Fairer Sex’ but others are not so easy to classify and have been ordered in a less conventional fashion.