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If you would like to see another song signed in Makaton, please leave your request in the comments. This video is aimed towards children and people with learning or hearing difficulties, but can be enjoyed by all :) Makaton is a unique language programme which consists of signs and symbols, ideal for those with learning difficulties.
In 1991 The Makaton Charity produced a video/DVD of children's familiar nursery rhymes, signed, spoken and sung by a well-known children's TV presenter, Dave Benson Phillips, who had previously used Makaton with poems and rhymes in the Children's BBC show Playdays. The aim was for it to be enjoyed by children with developmental disabilities and ...
Teach Yourself to Fly by Nigel Tangye was published on the eve of the Second World War. It was immediately recommended by the Air Ministry to prospective RAF pilots. Teach Yourself Radio Communication and Teach Yourself Air Navigation were added to the list in 1941. There was a big demand for these books, especially as supplies were constrained ...
"Teach Yourself Heath" is the name of a one-sided 33rpm flexi-disc by Monty Python [1] which was given away free with issue 27 of ZigZag magazine in December 1972 and also included inside initial copies of their third album Monty Python's Previous Record.
American Sign Language (ASL), the sign language used by the deaf community throughout most of North America, has a rich vocabulary of terms, which include profanity.Within deaf culture, there is a distinction drawn between signs used to curse versus signs that are used to describe sexual acts.
Set Yourself Free is a hoax [1] public service announcement directed by Henry Inglis and Aaron McCann, released on 29 January 2014, via the Internet. It has gone viral, and by 5 February 2014, had over 12 million views on YouTube. [ 2 ]
Many if not most enslaved people were kept in a state of ignorance about anything beyond their immediate circumstances which were under the control of owners, the lawmakers and authorities. When an enslaved person learned or was taught to read, it became their duty to teach someone else, spawning the phrase "Each one teach one". [2]
Similarly, Origen (c. 185 – c. 253) claims that the Greek sages were pre-empted by the Song of Songs, which contains the line: "If you do not know yourself, O fair one among women" (1:8, LXX). [ 59 ] [ g ] Later Christian authors who wrote about self-knowledge tended to do so in the context of one of these two texts, without explicit ...