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The following other wikis use this file: Usage on en.wikisource.org Index:Carl Schurz, Education of Orphan Children.pdf; Page:Carl Schurz, Education of Orphan Children.pdf/1; Page:Carl Schurz, Education of Orphan Children.pdf/2
In typography, a dinkus is a typographic symbol which often consists of three spaced asterisks or bullets in a horizontal row, i.e. ∗ ∗ ∗ or • • • . The symbol has a variety of uses, and it usually denotes an intentional omission or a logical "break" of varying degree in a written work.
The Horn Book Guide described Once as "this is the rare Holocaust book for young readers that doesn't alleviate its dark themes with a comforting ending". [8]The School Library Journal recommends this book as a 'read aloud' book, and notes how it contrasts "how children would like to imagine their world with the tragic way that life sometimes unfolds."
A Guide To Newspapers And Newspaper Holdings In Maryland, 1991, front and back matter.pdf 1,712 × 1,762, 26 pages; 12.09 MB A monograph of the stubble burning in India.jpeg 865 × 963; 70 KB A page from Kitāb Muntaza‘ al-Akhbār.jpeg 2,074 × 2,768; 705 KB
Nicholas Benedict, a nine-year-old orphan and genius, moves to the Rothschild Manor orphanage after being removed from his previous orphanage, Littleview, because of his narcolepsy, a condition that sends him into deep sleep at unexpected moments, and, in Nicholas' case, often whilst he is laughing or experiencing strong emotion. Because of his ...
The file contains lines of the format word[/part-of-speech] pronunciation. Each line is ended with the ASCII carriage return character (CR, '\r', 0x0D, 13 in decimal). The word field can include apostrophes (e.g. isn't), hyphens (e.g. able-bodied), and multiple words separated by underscores (e.g. monkey_wrench). Non-English words are generally ...
Philip Hensher wrote that "The single problem with the book is the prose, which, for the first time, is so lacking in local colour as to be entirely inappropriate to the task in hand." He concludes that "The resolution is moving and graceful, but the problem of the voice is a universal one, present and incredible in every sentence".
Taking place in the Elizabethan-era England, it recounts the story of Widge, an orphan whose master sends him to steal Hamlet from The Lord Chamberlain's Men. It was an ALA Notable Children's Book in 1999. [2] Blackwood published two sequels, Shakespeare's Scribe (2000) and Shakespeare's Spy (2003).