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Alliteration Lily Loves Listening to Lullabies Surely Shirley
Shaffer shouldn't shake the sugar, should she ?
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Homophones
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Onomatopoeia
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Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall Humpty Dumpty had a great fall All
the Kings horses and all the Kings men Couldn't put Humpty together
again
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Where the acorn tumbles down, Where the ash tree sheds its
berry, With your fur so soft and brown, With your eye so round and
merry, Scarcely moving the long grass, Fieldmouse, I can see you
pass. Little thing, in what dark den, Lie you all the winter
sleeping? Till warm weather comes again, Then once more I see you
peeping Round about the tall tree roots, Nibbling at their fallen
fruits. Fieldmouse, fieldmouse, do not go, Where the farmer stacks
his treasure, Find the nut that falls below, Eat the acorn at your
pleasure, But you must not steal the grain He has stacked with so
much pain. Make your hole where mosses spring, Underneath the tall
oak's shadow, Pretty, quiet harmless thing, Play about the sunny
meadow. Keep away from corn and house, None will harm you, little
mouse.
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basketball The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 |
Copyright basketball game played generally indoors by two opposing
teams of five players each. Basketball was conceived in 1891 by Dr.
James Naismith, a physical education instructor at the YMCA college
in Springfield, Mass., as a way to condition outdoor athletes
during the winter months. His original list of 13 rules has
undergone a century of revision, leading to faster pacing and
greater athleticism. Today basketball is one of the most popular
American sports and one the rest of the world has adopted. Basic
Rules At each end of the courtusually about 92 ft (28 m) long and
50 ft (15 m) wideis a bottomless basket made of white cord net and
suspended from a metal ring, 18 in. (46 cm) in diameter, which is
attached 10 ft (3.05 m) above the floor (usually hardwood) to a
backboard made of fiberglass, wood, or other material. Players may
throw, dribble (bounce), or shoot the Naismith...
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hap py hp i/ [hap-ee]adjective, -pi er, -pi est. 1.delighted,
pleased, or glad, as over a particular thing: to be happy to see a
person. 2. contentment, or joy: a happy mood; a happy frame of
mind. 3.favored by fortune; fortunate or lucky: a happy, fruitful
land. Dictionary
Chapter Headings tell you the topics in a textbook. They also
tell you if the book will give you the information you need. Bats
What Bats Look Like p.11 Where They Live p.21 Foods They Eat p.32
How Bats Help Humans p.46