View allAll Photos Tagged Grammar
It's the sad story of a handle with something broken. Complete the following sentence:
"The handle's broken . . . "
On Friday 12 July 48 Year 9 students left Enfield Grammar School at 5.00am on the History trip to the First World War Battlefields near Ypres. Our numbers increased to 49 at the Eurotunnel: Remaine Newland finally arrived!! His alarm hadn't worked - Remaine's mum put her driving skills to the test and successfully pursued the coach to Folkestone.
The boys visited the Trench of Death, one of the longest preserved sections of trench in Belgium. This gave them an opportunity to see the strategic significance of the river Ijzer and the importance of defending it from the Germans. From there, the group went on to the museum at Zonnebeke for a tour and lunch.
The afternoon's visits included a tour of Polygon Woods Cemetery and Hill 60. The two cemeteries allowed the boys to compare the layout of a concentration cemetery with a battlefield cemetery. They paid their respects to the Australian soldiers buried at Polygon Woods. At Hill 60, the boys learnt about the different battles that were fought around Ypres and were told how the mine crater we visited was created. Many were shocked to learn that the explosion at Hill 60 was so loud it had been heard in London.
Despite the highly dramatic, but non-serious, head injury sustained by a member of the group, everyone managed to enjoy the visit to the Menin Gate and the town of Ypres. When looking at the Menin Gate, the boys not only saw names from Middlesex and Essex but India, Australia and Jamaica - further emphasising the fact it was a world war.
A final highlight for many was the visit to the chocolate shop where they stocked up on presents for their parents and snacks for themselves.
LONDON GRAMMAR
Palais des Sports / Paris, France
22/10/2014
by Sandie Besso Photography
for any booking, professional & artistic shootings contact me : sandie.besso@gmail.com
Paris / France
On Friday 12 July 48 Year 9 students left Enfield Grammar School at 5.00am on the History trip to the First World War Battlefields near Ypres. Our numbers increased to 49 at the Eurotunnel: Remaine Newland finally arrived!! His alarm hadn't worked - Remaine's mum put her driving skills to the test and successfully pursued the coach to Folkestone.
The boys visited the Trench of Death, one of the longest preserved sections of trench in Belgium. This gave them an opportunity to see the strategic significance of the river Ijzer and the importance of defending it from the Germans. From there, the group went on to the museum at Zonnebeke for a tour and lunch.
The afternoon's visits included a tour of Polygon Woods Cemetery and Hill 60. The two cemeteries allowed the boys to compare the layout of a concentration cemetery with a battlefield cemetery. They paid their respects to the Australian soldiers buried at Polygon Woods. At Hill 60, the boys learnt about the different battles that were fought around Ypres and were told how the mine crater we visited was created. Many were shocked to learn that the explosion at Hill 60 was so loud it had been heard in London.
Despite the highly dramatic, but non-serious, head injury sustained by a member of the group, everyone managed to enjoy the visit to the Menin Gate and the town of Ypres. When looking at the Menin Gate, the boys not only saw names from Middlesex and Essex but India, Australia and Jamaica - further emphasising the fact it was a world war.
A final highlight for many was the visit to the chocolate shop where they stocked up on presents for their parents and snacks for themselves.
On Friday 12 July 48 Year 9 students left Enfield Grammar School at 5.00am on the History trip to the First World War Battlefields near Ypres. Our numbers increased to 49 at the Eurotunnel: Remaine Newland finally arrived!! His alarm hadn't worked - Remaine's mum put her driving skills to the test and successfully pursued the coach to Folkestone.
The boys visited the Trench of Death, one of the longest preserved sections of trench in Belgium. This gave them an opportunity to see the strategic significance of the river Ijzer and the importance of defending it from the Germans. From there, the group went on to the museum at Zonnebeke for a tour and lunch.
The afternoon's visits included a tour of Polygon Woods Cemetery and Hill 60. The two cemeteries allowed the boys to compare the layout of a concentration cemetery with a battlefield cemetery. They paid their respects to the Australian soldiers buried at Polygon Woods. At Hill 60, the boys learnt about the different battles that were fought around Ypres and were told how the mine crater we visited was created. Many were shocked to learn that the explosion at Hill 60 was so loud it had been heard in London.
Despite the highly dramatic, but non-serious, head injury sustained by a member of the group, everyone managed to enjoy the visit to the Menin Gate and the town of Ypres. When looking at the Menin Gate, the boys not only saw names from Middlesex and Essex but India, Australia and Jamaica - further emphasising the fact it was a world war.
A final highlight for many was the visit to the chocolate shop where they stocked up on presents for their parents and snacks for themselves.
Stratford's famous row of Almshouses was founded at the beginning of the 15th century by the Guild of the Holy Cross, and it stands on Church Street alongside both the Guild Chapel and the King Edward VI Grammar School, which is where Shakespeare was educated.
On Friday 12 July 48 Year 9 students left Enfield Grammar School at 5.00am on the History trip to the First World War Battlefields near Ypres. Our numbers increased to 49 at the Eurotunnel: Remaine Newland finally arrived!! His alarm hadn't worked - Remaine's mum put her driving skills to the test and successfully pursued the coach to Folkestone.
The boys visited the Trench of Death, one of the longest preserved sections of trench in Belgium. This gave them an opportunity to see the strategic significance of the river Ijzer and the importance of defending it from the Germans. From there, the group went on to the museum at Zonnebeke for a tour and lunch.
The afternoon's visits included a tour of Polygon Woods Cemetery and Hill 60. The two cemeteries allowed the boys to compare the layout of a concentration cemetery with a battlefield cemetery. They paid their respects to the Australian soldiers buried at Polygon Woods. At Hill 60, the boys learnt about the different battles that were fought around Ypres and were told how the mine crater we visited was created. Many were shocked to learn that the explosion at Hill 60 was so loud it had been heard in London.
Despite the highly dramatic, but non-serious, head injury sustained by a member of the group, everyone managed to enjoy the visit to the Menin Gate and the town of Ypres. When looking at the Menin Gate, the boys not only saw names from Middlesex and Essex but India, Australia and Jamaica - further emphasising the fact it was a world war.
A final highlight for many was the visit to the chocolate shop where they stocked up on presents for their parents and snacks for themselves.
On Friday 12 July 48 Year 9 students left Enfield Grammar School at 5.00am on the History trip to the First World War Battlefields near Ypres. Our numbers increased to 49 at the Eurotunnel: Remaine Newland finally arrived!! His alarm hadn't worked - Remaine's mum put her driving skills to the test and successfully pursued the coach to Folkestone.
The boys visited the Trench of Death, one of the longest preserved sections of trench in Belgium. This gave them an opportunity to see the strategic significance of the river Ijzer and the importance of defending it from the Germans. From there, the group went on to the museum at Zonnebeke for a tour and lunch.
The afternoon's visits included a tour of Polygon Woods Cemetery and Hill 60. The two cemeteries allowed the boys to compare the layout of a concentration cemetery with a battlefield cemetery. They paid their respects to the Australian soldiers buried at Polygon Woods. At Hill 60, the boys learnt about the different battles that were fought around Ypres and were told how the mine crater we visited was created. Many were shocked to learn that the explosion at Hill 60 was so loud it had been heard in London.
Despite the highly dramatic, but non-serious, head injury sustained by a member of the group, everyone managed to enjoy the visit to the Menin Gate and the town of Ypres. When looking at the Menin Gate, the boys not only saw names from Middlesex and Essex but India, Australia and Jamaica - further emphasising the fact it was a world war.
A final highlight for many was the visit to the chocolate shop where they stocked up on presents for their parents and snacks for themselves.
You feel grammar is hard to understand bm English speaking can make it easy not with boring theoretical grammar but through practical, fun and which easy to understand.
Old stone sign on a building in Lewes, East Sussex.
Taken with Minolta MC Rokkor-PF 85mm f1.7 on Panasonic GX7.
On Friday 12 July 48 Year 9 students left Enfield Grammar School at 5.00am on the History trip to the First World War Battlefields near Ypres. Our numbers increased to 49 at the Eurotunnel: Remaine Newland finally arrived!! His alarm hadn't worked - Remaine's mum put her driving skills to the test and successfully pursued the coach to Folkestone.
The boys visited the Trench of Death, one of the longest preserved sections of trench in Belgium. This gave them an opportunity to see the strategic significance of the river Ijzer and the importance of defending it from the Germans. From there, the group went on to the museum at Zonnebeke for a tour and lunch.
The afternoon's visits included a tour of Polygon Woods Cemetery and Hill 60. The two cemeteries allowed the boys to compare the layout of a concentration cemetery with a battlefield cemetery. They paid their respects to the Australian soldiers buried at Polygon Woods. At Hill 60, the boys learnt about the different battles that were fought around Ypres and were told how the mine crater we visited was created. Many were shocked to learn that the explosion at Hill 60 was so loud it had been heard in London.
Despite the highly dramatic, but non-serious, head injury sustained by a member of the group, everyone managed to enjoy the visit to the Menin Gate and the town of Ypres. When looking at the Menin Gate, the boys not only saw names from Middlesex and Essex but India, Australia and Jamaica - further emphasising the fact it was a world war.
A final highlight for many was the visit to the chocolate shop where they stocked up on presents for their parents and snacks for themselves.
English Grammar Test
English ould become the south-east of Scotland, under the influence of the empire in the Middle Ages. Northumbria tribe after the wide influence in the United Kingdom and the United Kingdom from the 18th century in the British Empire and the United States since the mid-20th century, and distributed widely. The world has become a leading language of international discourse and a common language in the region. Is taught as a second language, and is used on a wide range of the official languages ​​of the European Union and some Commonwealth countries. As with many organizations in the world. Originally spoken in most third world after Mandarin Chinese and Spanish. It is usually the language spoken in all parts of the world.
Creator: Unidentified.
Location: Spring Hill, Brisbane, Queensland.
Description: Group portrait of the First Fifteen taken for a rugby tour of Sydney, 1914. Copied and digitised from a Kodak postcard.
View the original image at the State Library of Queensland: hdl.handle.net/10462/deriv/398209
Information about State Library of Queensland’s collection: www.slq.qld.gov.au/resources/picture-queensland
You are free to use this image without permission. Please attribute State Library of Queensland.
At a diner on 27th st NYC. Can you picture the look on the face of the
scribe while they were grappling with with this one?
This was the sign Chuck & I saw in the parking garage when we went to see Jonathan Coulton. We saw 5 or 6 of these. Do you think they could have had someone proofread it before they ordered it?
Mignon Fogarty, a.k.a. Grammar Girl, was at Books, Inc. last night for a signing of her new book, "The Grammar Devotional."
On Friday 12 July 48 Year 9 students left Enfield Grammar School at 5.00am on the History trip to the First World War Battlefields near Ypres. Our numbers increased to 49 at the Eurotunnel: Remaine Newland finally arrived!! His alarm hadn't worked - Remaine's mum put her driving skills to the test and successfully pursued the coach to Folkestone.
The boys visited the Trench of Death, one of the longest preserved sections of trench in Belgium. This gave them an opportunity to see the strategic significance of the river Ijzer and the importance of defending it from the Germans. From there, the group went on to the museum at Zonnebeke for a tour and lunch.
The afternoon's visits included a tour of Polygon Woods Cemetery and Hill 60. The two cemeteries allowed the boys to compare the layout of a concentration cemetery with a battlefield cemetery. They paid their respects to the Australian soldiers buried at Polygon Woods. At Hill 60, the boys learnt about the different battles that were fought around Ypres and were told how the mine crater we visited was created. Many were shocked to learn that the explosion at Hill 60 was so loud it had been heard in London.
Despite the highly dramatic, but non-serious, head injury sustained by a member of the group, everyone managed to enjoy the visit to the Menin Gate and the town of Ypres. When looking at the Menin Gate, the boys not only saw names from Middlesex and Essex but India, Australia and Jamaica - further emphasising the fact it was a world war.
A final highlight for many was the visit to the chocolate shop where they stocked up on presents for their parents and snacks for themselves.
This was a memorable quote from our department meeting.
Created with fd's Flickr Toys
The image is from e_monk. By reading the image description it explains how perfect the image is. This was a marketing item for a company that sells cleansing products, for colonoscopy prep.
On Friday 12 July 48 Year 9 students left Enfield Grammar School at 5.00am on the History trip to the First World War Battlefields near Ypres. Our numbers increased to 49 at the Eurotunnel: Remaine Newland finally arrived!! His alarm hadn't worked - Remaine's mum put her driving skills to the test and successfully pursued the coach to Folkestone.
The boys visited the Trench of Death, one of the longest preserved sections of trench in Belgium. This gave them an opportunity to see the strategic significance of the river Ijzer and the importance of defending it from the Germans. From there, the group went on to the museum at Zonnebeke for a tour and lunch.
The afternoon's visits included a tour of Polygon Woods Cemetery and Hill 60. The two cemeteries allowed the boys to compare the layout of a concentration cemetery with a battlefield cemetery. They paid their respects to the Australian soldiers buried at Polygon Woods. At Hill 60, the boys learnt about the different battles that were fought around Ypres and were told how the mine crater we visited was created. Many were shocked to learn that the explosion at Hill 60 was so loud it had been heard in London.
Despite the highly dramatic, but non-serious, head injury sustained by a member of the group, everyone managed to enjoy the visit to the Menin Gate and the town of Ypres. When looking at the Menin Gate, the boys not only saw names from Middlesex and Essex but India, Australia and Jamaica - further emphasising the fact it was a world war.
A final highlight for many was the visit to the chocolate shop where they stocked up on presents for their parents and snacks for themselves.
2015/1/21
London Grammar's Dan Rothman, Hannah Reid and Dominic Dot Major performing at the Sound Academy in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
DSC00816.jpg
Queen Elizabeth Grammar School (QEGS) is an independent, public school for boys in Wakefield, West Yorkshire, England. QEGS is distinct from most other schools in that it was founded by Royal Charter of Queen Elizabeth I in 1591 at the request of leading citizens in Wakefield (headed by Thomas Saville and his two sons) 75 in total and some of whom formed the first governing body.
In 1854 QEGS moved to its present site in Northgate, Wakefield, into premises designed by the architect Richard Laneand formerly occupied by the West Riding Proprietary School. The attached Junior school for boys aged 7 to 11 was founded in 1910.
The school is part of a foundation, with both QEGS Senior and Junior schools joined together, along with the nearby Wakefield Girls' High School and its Junior School, and Mulberry House, which is a nursery and pre-prep department.
Some notable former pupils include, John Wolfenden, Baron Wolfenden, Joseph Moxon, Mathematician and Hydrographer to King Charles II, Richard Henry Lee, signer of the United States Declaration of Independence, US Senator and President of the Continental Congress, Mike Harrison, former captain England national rugby union team, Mike Tindall, England Rugby Union player, member of the World Cup winning team in 2003. John Potter, Archbishop of Canterbury and The Rt Revd and Rt Hon The Lord Hope of Thornes, former Archbishop of York.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_Elizabeth_Grammar_School,_Wak...
The demolition of the school St Catherines Academy, formerly known as Withins High and also Bolton County grammar during August 2012. Here the classrooms on the Newby Road side of the main building are exposed. The upper storey was formerly the Science Lecture Theatre, middle storey the Biology Lab with the Music room below.
On Monday 4th June, we were privileged to welcome the children's author Joe Craig back to Enfield Grammar School. He spoke to the year 7 students about his books, how he started writing and his plans to have a film made of his series of stories. Boys were able to ask him questions about his life and career and then meet him personally in the library and get their books signed. Joe Craig was born in 1981 in London. He is a children's novelist and musician, best known for the Jimmy Coates series of books, which is sometimes described as 'The Bourne Identity for kids'. He wrote his first novel, a thriller for children and young adults, about the fictional spy and assassin Jimmy Coates. His first book was one of the biggest selling children's books in the UK.