Brilliant is a four-level primary English course. The fourth level (age 9-11). 8 units covering topics Activities, Ordinal numbers, Hobbies, Health, Places in town, circus, School outings, Occupations.
Brilliant is a four-level primary English course. The fourth level (age 9-11). 8 units covering topics Activities, Ordinal numbers, Hobbies, Health, Places in town, circus, School outings, Occupations.
Algebra may seem intimidating—but it doesn't have to be. With Teach Yourself VISUALLY Algebra, you can learn algebra in a fraction of the time and without ever losing your cool. This visual guide takes advantage of color and illustrations to factor out confusion and helps you easily master the subject. You'll review the various properties of numbers, as well as how to use powers and exponents, fractions, decimals and percentages, and square and cube roots. Each chapter concludes with exercises to reinforce your skills.
1 Dora's Carnival Adventure is the perfect option for the child in your life. In this magical Nickelodeon game, your children will join Dora in her latest adventure at the carnival. 2 Dora's 3D Pyramid Adventure. For ages 3 to 6. 3 Al rescate! Diego needs you to join the rescue team and help him save a lost wolf pup and some pygmy marmosets with booboos! Will you help? Learn new animal facts and sounds, Spanish, and music 4 Now kids can play soccer on Dora's team. 5 Your child can join Dora and Tico in an exciting 3D driving game.
6 Kids can become star catchers just like Dora the Explorer when they count and collect the colorful shooting stars.
Kids' Favorite Songs kicks off with a cackle-worthy parody of Bob Dylan doing "Old McDonald," and from there the groovy gags keep comin' 'round the mountain. Everywhere Elmo turns on Sesame Street monsters spontaneously burst into song, and all because they want him to feature their favorite tunes on his forthcoming radio countdown. For Telly, winnowing the hits to one is akin to Cookie Monster choosing between a macaroon and a figgie bar: at first he's sure that "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" lights his fire, but then he says bye-bye to a black sheep. The street heaves a collective sigh pavementward when word comes down that the countdown is strictly a numbers gig, no music involved. Only Sesame Street could weave well-loved musical numbers around a simple numbers lesson with such wacky pizzazz, making this a countdown that's no letdown for high-spirited parent-preschooler combos. --Tammy La Gorce