Thu, 8 January 2009 Post By Online Shopping Store
LET ME INTRODUCE YOU TO ''Miss Understood'' No tissues included. This delightful teen series is hot and exciting and might cause a face or two to crack a smile. Collect all six designs in the Chicklets series. Even with blue hair, the possibilities Are Endless! ''Miss Understood'' is a Counted Cross Stitch design,Chicklets by Zoe and Joey, Inc. |
This is a museum quality, reproduction print on premium paper with archival/UV resistant inks. Date: 1876 Subject: Indians of North America--Exhibitions--France--Paris--1860-1870. Exhibitions--France--Paris--1860-1870. Cultural relations--1860-1870. France--1860-1870. Notes: Illus. in: Frank Leslie's illustrated newspaper, 1867 Feb. 23, p. 368. Format: Editorial cartoons 1860-1870.Wood engravings 1860-1870. SOURCE: Library of Congress |
This is a museum quality, reproduction print on premium paper with archival/UV resistant inks. Date: 1876 Subject: Indians of North America--Exhibitions--France--Paris--1860-1870. Exhibitions--France--Paris--1860-1870. Cultural relations--1860-1870. France--1860-1870. Notes: Illus. in: Frank Leslie's illustrated newspaper, 1867 Feb. 23, p. 368. Format: Editorial cartoons 1860-1870.Wood engravings 1860-1870. SOURCE: Library of Congress |
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Full title - A Little Misunderstood - Collection Volume Two. 2003 compilation is compiled from recordings made from 1972-1976, the absolute cream of three albums, 'Down At Rachel's Place' (1972), 'Broken Rainbows' (1974), & 'Smith & D'Abo' (1976), plus one bonus track, the 1974 single 'Stardust Serenade', that was previously only available in Japan. 21 tracks. RPM. |
What will happen if you can understand Animal Languages? After losing his horse and belongings to a trickster and gets lost in a forest, a kind-hearted man accidentally eats the Grass of Animal Language and obtains the ability to understand animal communications. This knowledge brings him good fortune while the trickster eats the same plant but gets his just deserts. Dialog in Mandarin & English. Subtitle in English, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, Pinyin. |
Text on Long Sleeve T-shirt: I know you think you understood what I said, but what you heard was not what I meant.Our standard t-shirts are made of 100% cotton and preshrunk (ultra cotton heavyweight). We typically use Gildan Activewear but at times may substitute with or the brand name t-shirts. We carry thousands of t-shirts with sayings. To view additional t-shirts please visit our storefront on Amazon (DesignAProduct) and search for t-shirt. This phrase or artwork can also be purchased on beach, hand, and bath towels, and long and short sleeve shirts. |
Text on Sweatshirt: When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things.I Corinthians (ch. XIII, v. 11)Gildan - Crewneck Sweatshirt A value fleece, made from Air Jet Spun Yarn, offers a soft feel and no pill, wash after wash. 7.75-ounce, 50/50 cotton/poly; double needle throughout, banded bottom, 1 x 1 athletic rib with Lycra, set-in sleeves. |
Text on Sweatshirt: I know you think you understood what I said, but what you heard was not what I meant.Gildan - Crewneck Sweatshirt A value fleece, made from Air Jet Spun Yarn, offers a soft feel and no pill, wash after wash. 7.75-ounce, 50/50 cotton/poly; double needle throughout, banded bottom, 1 x 1 athletic rib with Lycra, set-in sleeves. |
“The difference between the almost right word and the right word is really a large matter.” (Mark Twain)What’s the difference between: Nectar and ambrosia? Bough and branch? Astonished and surprised? Sensual and sensuous? Beside and besides? Many people use these words interchangeably but there are actually subtle and interesting differences in meaning and usage. Now from the author of Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge comes a fun and fascinating word reference book for word lovers, students, and trivia collectors alike. Readers will relish learning about these distinctions in this entertaining homage to a gift we use every day—words. |
Anyone who fondly remembers how the fresh air of the moors puts a blush in the cheeks of sallow young Mary in The Secret Garden will love Dorothy Canfield Fisher's Understood Betsy just as much. First published in 1916, this engaging classic tells the tale of a thin, pale 9-year-old orphan named Elizabeth Ann who is whisked away from her city home and relocated to a Vermont farm where her cousins, the "dreaded Putneys," live. The Putneys are not as bad as her doting, high-strung Aunt Frances warns, however, and Elizabeth, who had been nurtured by her aunt like an overwatered sapling--positively blooms under their breezy, earthy care.Elizabeth Ann's first victories are small ones--taking the reins from Uncle Harry, doing her own hair, making her own breakfast--but children will revel in the awakening independence and growing self-confidence of a girl who learns to think for herself... and even laugh. Along the way, "citified" readers of all ages will get a glimpse into the lives of people who are truly connected to the world around them--making butter ("We always bought ours," says Elizabeth Ann), experiencing the "rapt wonder that people in the past were really people," and understanding the difference between failing in school and failing at life. Fisher is a wise, personable storyteller, steeped in the Montessori principles of learning for its own sake, the value of process, and the importance of "indirect support" in child rearing. She also captures the tempestuous emotional life of a child as few authors can, crafting a story that children will find deeply satisfying. And in the end, readers will have grown as fond of the happier, stronger "Betsy" as the gentle, unassuming Putneys have. Loving care was dolloped on this 1999 reissue of an old favorite--with sweet new pencil illustrations by Kimberly Bulcken Root, and an introduction and afterword by Eden Ross Lipson that offer a historical context for the book and its author. (Ages 8 to 12) --Karin Snelson Tags : Understood
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