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I got the permission of the lovely buyer to share the photos of her commission, so here come some pics of a really cute set of fashions I've made for her, according to her wishes : ).

 

Isn't the overview just the cutest thing?! She picked so many lovely fabrics and the fashions create a great capsule collection, very casual and highly compatible.

 

Thank you Amy, for your great commission!

Unknown....possibly an Admiral or Amana?

 

Lister D stationary engine

 

Seen at the 2024 East Midlands Steam and Country Show

How to Find the Right Mailing List List brokers have a wealth of knowledge about mailing lists that can make the task of selecting the right list much easier. They can also help you negotiate lower list-rental rates, which is a real benefit since renting lists can be expensive. List ... Read

 

videogalleria.net/how-to-find-the-right-mailing-list/

 

Visit videogalleria.net to template videos for your business

ZCCA Zurich Classic Car Award 2013

On our getaway to the sierra foothills, Angels Camp area, I had no idea where to look for birds. I did a google search and the one area that looked promising was the Calaveras Big Tree National Park that boasted many woodpeckers, one being the Pileated Woodpecker!...although uncommon.

 

The Pileated Woodpecker was at the top of my 'bucket list' for this year! As we were getting shots of the White-headed Woodpecker my best friend Marty said she saw something large land in the shade very near to us..boy were we both excited to see this amazing bird. It kept it's distance, flying around in the forest always landing in the shade and drumming from the top of a very high sequoia tree.

 

Not the best quality but I' so glad I finally got this one under my belt...that means there are more to come!!!...:)

 

Member of the Nature’s Spirit

Good Stewards of Nature

 

A South Shore westbound passes a highly visible detour listing along the Indiana Toll Road between Gary and East Chicago, Indiana.

Listed Building Grade I

List Entry Number : 1208577

Date First Listed : 1 June 1949

 

Prior's tower with hall range, extension and adjoining stables; now Deanery, museum and flats. For the Priory of St Mary, Carlisle. Late C15 tower and hall with C17 extensions and alterations; further 1853 extensions by James Stewart (internal alterations now partly removed, 1882 by CJ Ferguson); 1949-51 alterations dated 1950 on rainwater head. Red sandstone ashlar, some of the extensions are of squared red sandstone, on chamfered plinth, with string courses on tower and battlemented parapet. Flat lead roof on tower; otherwise greenslate roofs with coped gables and kneelers; full and half-gabled dormers; ashlar ridge and end chimney stacks. Stable range has sandstone flag roof. The main facade faces towards the Cathedral. Central square tower of 2 storeys over basement; the hall range at the right is 2-storey, 3 bays with projecting 2-storey extension; left 3-storey, 3-bay extension and beyond is the single storey, 4-bay stables. Tower has a central 2-light cusped headed oriel window, corbelled out, in a deeply chamfered surround under hoodmould and pent roof. Other small irregular casement windows; upper floor 2-light mullioned window with diamond leaded panes. The right return has a high crease for the original roof on the hall range. Rear has similar oriel and other windows. INTERIOR has rib-vaulted basement, contemporary with the tower; panelled upper floor room with panelled doors; painted wooden ceiling has decorative and heraldic devices, applied during Prior Senhouse's term of office c1494 - 1521. Angle newel stair to top storey and roof. The Deanery has a 1950 right doorway with projecting stone porch, in a single-storey 3-bay pent extension of 1853. First floor is C17 with 2-light mullioned windows and late C17 carved panel of Bishop's arms. 2-light gabled 1/2 dormers (appear on a view of 1715). The projecting facing double gable extension at right is of 1853 with 2- and 3-light mullioned and cross-mullioned windows. The rear wall of the hall range is probably C15 stonework but now with sash and mullioned windows. INTERIOR has ground floor C16 segmental-arched stone fireplaces; an upper floor fireplace is on corbels. Now internal front wall has former C17 doorway. Wooden staircase is probably of 1882 by CJ Ferguson; C19 panelled doors. Extensive repairs in 1988-9 required the gutting of the hall range. No.5 (the left extension) was formerly part of the Deanery but now a flat. Central panelled door in stone architrave with segmental pediment and flanking windows in stone architraves were all inserted in 1950 when an 1853 pent extension was removed; left blocked opening has a double chamfered surround; a right projecting stone porch (added since 1950) gives access to tower. Above are sash windows with glazing bars in C17 stone architraves with hood cornices. The V-jointed quoining at the left of calciferous sandstone is 2-storey and above it changes to red sandstone; the third storey was added in C19 with 1/2 gabled dormers. Rear 2- and 3-light mullioned and cross-mullioned windows. INTERIOR altered. Prior's Stables, Nos 5A and 5B, have a left recessed doorway now with C20 door, the C15 flattened arch with the initials TG (for Prior Thomas Gondibour, prior c1464-1494). Further right C15 doorway has segmental chamfered arch with hoodmould. Between the doors are a small and larger sash window with glazing bars in chamfered surrounds; further left C20 window in C20 opening. Left return has C20 double plank doors in C20 former garage opening. The roof had to be rebuilt in the 1960s. INTERIORS not inspected. It is now thought that the tower was built in the 1490s, not c1507 as previously thought.

 

historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1208577

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Listed_buildings_in_Carlisle

Listed Building Grade II

List Entry Number : 1210006

Date First Listed : 16 June 1988

 

Built in the 1890's. this was originally the city treasurer's office, and has since been used for other purposes. It is in brick with a Welsh slate roof. The Fisher Street front has two storeys and three bays. A segmental archway leads through to a rear block of three storeys and ten bays. Most of the windows are sashes, with some casement windows on the Fisher Street front. Other features include a wooden oriel window, and doorways with fanlights.

 

historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1210006

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Listed_buildings_in_Carlisle

Listed Building Grade II

List Entry Number : 1292379

Date First Listed : 31 May 1949

 

Originally an early 19th Century house, later used as shops and an office, in brick on a chamfered plinth, with dressings in calciferous sandstone, quoins, and a Welsh slate roof. There are two storeys and four bays. On the front is an engaged Roman Doric porch that has an entablature with a paterae frieze and cornice. In the ground floor are shop bow windows, and in the upper floor the windows are sashes. At the rear is an extension with a bowed bay window.

 

historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1292379

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Listed_buildings_in_Carlisle

american cemetary manila, the philippines

The Grade I Listed Carlisle Castle, Carlisle, Cumbria.

 

Carlisle Castle was first built during the reign of William II of England, the son of William the Conqueror who invaded England in 1066. At that time, Cumberland (the original name for north and west Cumbria) was still considered a part of Scotland. William II ordered the construction of a Norman style motte and bailey castle in Carlisle on the site of an old Roman fort, with construction beginning in 1093. The need for a castle in Carlisle was to keep the northern border of England secured against the threat of invasion from Scotland. In 1122, Henry I of England ordered a stone castle to be constructed on the site.

 

The act of driving out the Scots from Cumberland led to many attempts to retake the lands. The result of this was that Carlisle and its castle would change hands many times for the next 700 years. The first attempt began during the troubled reign of Stephen of England. On the 26 March 1296, John 'The Red' Comyn, since the fourth quarter of 1295 Lord of Annandale, led a Scottish host across the Solway to attack Carlisle.

 

The then governor of the castle, one Robert de Brus, deposed Lord of Annandale, withstood the attack, before forcing the raiders to retreat back through Annandale to Sweetheart Abbey.

 

Henry VIII converted the castle for artillery, employing the engineer Stefan von Haschenperg. For a few months in 1567, Mary, Queen of Scots was imprisoned within the castle, in the Warden’s Tower, which was demolished in 1835. Later, the castle was besieged by the Parliamentary forces for eight months in 1644, during the English Civil War. The most important battles for the city of Carlisle and its castle were during the second Jacobite rising against George II of Great Britain in 1745. The forces of Prince Charles Edward Stuart travelled south from Scotland into England reaching as far south as Derby. Carlisle and the castle were seized and fortified by the Jacobites.

 

However, they were driven north by the forces of William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland, the son of George II. Carlisle was recaptured, and the Jacobites were jailed and executed. After 1746, the castle became somewhat neglected, although some minor repairs were undertaken such as that of the drawbridge in 1783.

 

Some parts of the castle were then demolished for use as raw materials in the 19th century to create what is visible to the visitor today. The Army moved in to take hold of the castle and in 1873 a system of recruiting areas based on counties was instituted under the Cardwell Reforms and the castle became the depot for the 34th (Cumberland) Regiment of Foot and the 55th (Westmorland) Regiment of Foot. Under the Childers Reforms, the 34th and 55th regiments amalgamated to form the Border Regiment with its depot in the castle in 1881. The castle remained the depot of the Border Regiment until 1959.

 

Information Source:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlisle_Castle

 

The Grade I Listed Lincoln Castle, in Lincoln, Lincolnshire.

 

Lincoln Castle was built during the late 11th century by William the Conqueror on the site of a pre-existing Roman fortress. The castle is unusual in that it has two mottes. It is only one of two such castles in the country, the other being at Lewes in Sussex.

 

When William the Conqueror defeated Harold Godwinson and the English at The Battle of Hastings on 14 October 1066, he continued to face resistance to his rule in the north of England. For a number of years, William's position was very insecure. In order to project his influence northwards to control the people of the Danelaw (an area traditionally under the control of Scandinavian settlers), he constructed a number of major castles in the north and midlands of England. It was at this time that the new king built major castles at Warwick, Nottingham and York. After gaining control of York, the Conqueror turned southwards and arrived at the Roman and Viking city of Lincoln.

 

When William reached Lincoln (one of the country's major settlements), he found a Viking commercial and trading centre with a population of 6,000 to 8,000. The remains of the old Roman walled fortress located 60 metres (200 ft) above the countryside to the south and west, proved an ideal strategic position to construct a new castle. Also, Lincoln represented a vital strategic crossroads of the the same routes which influenced the siting of the Roman fort): Ermine Street, Fosse Way, Valley of the River Trent, River Witham & Lincolnshire Wolds

 

A castle here could guard several of the main strategic routes and form part of a network of strongholds of the Norman kingdom, in Danish Mercia, roughly the area of the country that is today referred to as the East Midlands, to control the country internally. Also (in the case of the Wolds) it could form a centre from which troops could be sent to repel Scandinavian landings anywhere on the coast from the Trent to the Welland, to a large extent, by using the roads which the Romans had constructed for the same purpose.

 

Work on the new fortification was completed in 1068. It is probable that at first a wooden keep was constructed which was later replaced with a much stronger stone one. To the south, where the Roman wall stands on the edge of a steep slope, it was retained partially as a curtain wall and partially as a revetment retaining the mottes. In the west, where the ground is more level, the Roman wall was buried within an earth rampart and extended upward to form the Norman castle wall. The Roman west gate (on the same site as the castle's westgate) was excavated in the 19th century but began to collapse on exposure, and so was re-buried.

 

The castle was the focus of attention during the First Battle of Lincoln which occurred on 2 February 1141, during the struggle between King Stephen and Empress Matilda over who should be monarch in England. It was held but damaged, and a new tower, called the Lucy Tower, was built.

 

Lincoln Castle was again the site of a siege followed by the Second Battle of Lincoln, on 20 May 1217, during the reign of King John in the course of the First Barons' War. This was the period of political struggle which led to the signing of Magna Carta on 15 June 1215.

 

As in Norwich and other places, the castle was used as a secure site in which to establish a prison. At Lincoln, the prison Gaol was built in 1787 and extended in 1847. Imprisoned debtors were allowed some social contact but the regime for criminals was designed to be one of isolation, according to the separate system. Consequently, the seating in the prison chapel is designed to enclose each prisoner individually so that the preacher could see everyone but each could see only him. By 1878 the system was discredited and the inmates were transferred to the new jail in the eastern outskirts of Lincoln. The prison in the castle was left without a use until the Lincolnshire Archives were housed in its cells.

 

Information Source:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lincoln_Castle

 

The Grade I Listed Bolsover Castle, in the town of Bolsover, Derbyshire.

 

Built in the early 17th century, the present castle lies on the earthworks and ruins of the 12th-century medieval castle; the first structure of the present castle was built between 1612 and 1617 by Sir Charles Cavendish.

 

The original castle was built by the Peverel family in the 12th century and became Crown property in 1155 when William Peverel the Younger died. The Ferrers family who were Earls of Derby laid claim to the Peveril property.

 

When a group of barons led by King Henry II's sons – Henry the Young King, Geoffrey Duke of Brittany, and Prince Richard, later Richard the Lionheart – revolted against the king's rule, Henry built the castles of Bolsover and Peveril in Derbyshire. The garrison was increased to a force led by 20 knights and was shared with the castles of Peveril and Nottingham during the revolt.

 

King John ascended the throne in 1199 after his brother Richard's death. William de Ferrers maintained the claim of the Earls of Derby to the Peveril estates. He paid John for the lordship of the Peak, but the Crown retained possession of Bolsover and Peveril Castles. John finally gave them to Ferrers to secure his support in the face of country-wide rebellion. However, castellan Brian de Lisle refused to hand them over. Although Lisle and Ferrers were both John's supporters, John gave Ferrers permission to use force to take the castles. Bolsover fell to Ferrers' forces in 1217 after a siege.

 

The castle was returned to crown control in 1223 and they repaired the damage the Earl of Derby had caused when capturing the castle six years earlier. Under their custodianship, the castle gradually fell into a state of disrepair.

 

Bolsover castle was granted to George Talbot, 6th Earl of Shrewsbury, by King Edward VI in 1553. Following Shrewsbury's death in 1590, his son Gilbert, 7th Earl of Shrewsbury, sold the ruins of Bolsover Castle to his brother-in-law Sir Charles Cavendish, who wanted to build a new castle on the site. Working with builder and designer Robert Smythson, Cavendish's castle was designed for elegant living rather than defence and was unfinished at the time of his death.

 

The building of the castle was continued by Cavendish's two sons, William and John, who were influenced by the Italian-inspired work of the architect Inigo Jones. Construction was interrupted by the Civil Wars of 1642 to 1651, during which the castle was taken by the Parliamentarians, who slighted it, when it fell into a ruinous state.

 

William Cavendish, who was created Marquess of Newcastle in 1643 and Duke of Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 1665 and by the time of his death in 1676 the castle had been restored to good order. It then passed through Margaret Bentinck, Duchess of Portland into the Bentinck family, and ultimately became one of the seats of the Earls and Dukes of Portland.

 

After 1883 the castle was uninhabited, and in 1945 it was given to the nation by the 7th Duke of Portland. The Ministry of Works stabilized the buildings and began opening portions to visitations by the public. The castle is now in the care of English Heritage and operated as a tourist attraction.

 

Information Source:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolsover_Castle

 

Found shopping list, FreshCo grocery store parking lot, Powell River, B.C., Canada.

The Grade I Listed St Grwst Church, Church Street, Llanrwst, County Conwy, North Wales.

 

The church was built in the in the 1470s in Perpendicular Gothic style, while the Gwydir Chapel was added in 1633–34 by Richard Wynn of Gwydir. The west tower was added in the early 19th century, replacing a bellcote. In 1884 the Lancaster architects Paley and Austin restored the church and added a north aisle. They also removed the west gallery, and reseated the church, increasing its capacity to 362. The cost of their work amounted to £2,300 (£200,000 as of 2014).

 

The Gwydir Chapel contains 17th-century fittings and fixtures, including stalls, a lectern and a communion table. There are also numerous monuments and a 13th-century stone coffin which is said to be that of Llywelyn the Great. The monuments date from 1440 to the 17th century, these include the tomb of Sir John Wynn, who died in 1627, and other members of the Wynn family.

 

I had some fun with gauze.

Listed Building Grade II

List Entry Number : 1207307

Date First Listed : 27 September 1979

 

Built 1901-3, the Post Office was designed by Henry Tanner, and is in a mix of Renaissance and Jacobean styles. It is built in sandstone and has a large rectangular plan. The building is in three storeys with a basement and attic, and the main front is in seven bays. The outer bays project forward and have shaped gables containing Diocletian windows. Most of the other windows are mullioned and transomed. The attached railings are included in the listing.

 

historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1207307

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Listed_buildings_in_Preston,_Lancashire

"Bucket List" is the challenge for Our Daily Challenge today. Its my birthday and honestly, having personally survived Covid since my last birthday, I feel my Bucket List is gratifyingly full. Of course I can always wish for more foreign travel. Oh India! My life has been blessed with riches of many kinds and I have long known it. The task now is to be mindfully thankful and kind. And when restless review memories and photos.

There is a lot that I want to get done this year, so I designed a list to keep track of what I want to do.

The Grade I Listed Gatehouse to Nottingham Castle. In Nottingham, Nottinghamshire.

 

The Gatehouse, outerbridge and adjoining gateway were built between 1252-1255 for Henry III. It was altered in the mid 16th century, slighted 1651 and restored 1908. The parapet, string course and cross casement windows, are all early 20the Century.

 

When the castle itself was restored in 1875 the gatehouse of the medieval castle and much of the walling of the outer bailey were retained as a garden wall for the re-opened grounds. However, the northernmost part of the outer bailey was lost when an approach road was constructed in the 1830s for the development of The Park Estate on the former deer park.

 

Information sources:

britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/101247094-nottingham-castle-...

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nottingham_Castle

 

The Real Hong Kong Car Culture

 

Hong Kong Car | Automotive Photography since 2011

 

For a detailed introduction | guide on Hong Kong Car Licence Plates | Car Vanity Plates click on the link below to learn more :

 

www.j3consultantshongkong.com/hk-car-vanity-plates

 

One of the largest collections of quality Hong Kong Car Images and specialising in Car Licence Plates | Car Vanity Plates or as the Hong Kong Government likes to call them - Vehicle Registration Marks

 

I photograph all car brands and please do bear in mind I am an enthusiastic amateur and NOT a professional photographer but I do have a fairly distinctive style and it has got better over the years.

 

☛.... and if you want to read about my views on Hong Kong, then go to my blog, link is shown below, I have lived in Hong Kong for over 50 years!

 

www.j3consultantshongkong.com/j3c-blog

 

☛ Photography is simply a hobby for me, I do NOT sell my images and all of my images can be FREELY downloaded from this site in the original upload image size or 5 other sizes, please note that you DO NOT have to ask for permission to download and use any of my images!

The Grade I listed Hospital of St John Baptist without the Barrs, St Johns Street, Lichfield, Staffordshire.

 

The building has ancient roots, once providing accommodation to travellers outside the southern city walls who would arrive in Lichfield after the gates had closed for the night. The distinctive eight chimneys fronting St John’s Street date back to the Tudor period when the hospital served as an almshouse for elderly gentlemen in the city.

 

In 1129, Roger de Clinton was appointed Bishop of Lichfield. He built a new cathedral fortified the Cathedral Close and laid out a new town. Finally, he constructed a defensive ditch and walls around the city. There were four gates or 'barrs' allowing movement in and out of the city walls, which were closed at 8 or 9 at night and reopened at 7 in the morning.

 

This created a problem for pilgrims and travellers to the city who arrived after the gates had closed for the night. At this time Lichfield was a popular place for pilgrims as the new cathedral housed a shrine with the remains of St Chad. To provide shelter for these many pilgrims and travellers outside the city walls, Bishop de Clinton ordered the building of a priory just outside the southern gate where the road from London entered the city.

 

The priory was completed in 1135 and the Bishop installed Augustinian Canons with solemn vows to provide food and shelter for the travellers. This priory brought into being 'The Hospital of St John Baptist without the Barrs’ (hospital referred to a place of hospitality and not to health care).

 

Information Source:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hospital_of_St_John_Baptist_without...

 

Check out my albums list for some of my best work: www.flickr.com/photos/200044612@N04/albums/

 

See my 'Tutorials & Commentary on AI' album for some information about how I make my images: www.flickr.com/photos/200044612@N04/albums/72177720325900...

 

See my main account for my photography, videos, fractal images and more here: www.flickr.com/photos/josh-rokman/

 

Made with Bing Image Creator, which is powered by DALL·E 3.

 

- Josh

The angle of list is the degree to which a vessel heels (leans, or tilts)

 

The Grade I Listed St Peters Church in Scotter a village in West Lindsey, Lincolnshire.

 

The doorway is the oldest part of the church with the arch being Norman and the plain tympanum above the lintel thought to be Saxon. The porch is later in date with a record of it being reroofed in 1668 and completely rebuilt in 1820. The church was altered significantly in the early 13th century when the five arches in the north wall were constructed. In the 15th century the walls were lifted and the clerestory windows added for additional light.

 

The brass plaque above the pulpit is to Marmaduke Tyrwhitt, fourth son of William Tyrhwitt. Marmaduke was born in 1533, the fourth son of William Tyrhwitt. He was an ecclesiastical commissioner, and probably also had legal connections. He presided over a Manorial court at Bottesford in 1591, married Ellen Reresby, son of Lionel Reresby, and they had 5 sons and 6 daughters He died in his sixty sixth year 1599. The font is 14th century. The embattled tower was added about 1400 and was heightened to 72 feet a century later. It houses what is an important example of a turret clock by James Harrison of Hull.

 

Information Source:

britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/101064133-church-of-st-peter...

www.explorechurches.org/church/st-peter-scotter

 

Exchequer Gate, 14thC, west towers, 13thC

 

P4170614 Anx2 Q90 Ap Q11 1400h

The Grade I Listed Roman Baths in Bath, Somerset.

 

The water which bubbles up from the ground at Bath falls as rain on the nearby Mendip Hills. It percolates down through limestone aquifers to a depth of between 2,700 and 4,300 metres (8,900 and 14,100 ft) where geothermal energy raises the water temperature to between 69 and 96 °C (156.2 and 204.8 °F). Under pressure, the heated water rises to the surface along fissures and faults in the limestone. This process is similar to an artificial one known as Enhanced Geothermal System which also makes use of the high pressures and temperatures below the Earth's crust. Hot water at a temperature of 46 °C (114.8 °F) rises here at the rate of 1,170,000 litres (257,364 imp gal) every day, from a geological fault (the Pennyquick fault).

 

The statue of King Bladud overlooking the King's Bath carries the date of 1699, but its inclusion in earlier pictures shows that it is much older than this. The first shrine at the site of the hot springs was built by Celts, and was dedicated to the goddess Sulis, whom the Romans identified with Minerva. Geoffrey of Monmouth in his largely fictional Historia Regum Britanniae describes how in 836 BC the spring was discovered by the British king Bladud who built the first Moorish baths. Early in the 18th century Geoffrey's obscure legend was given great prominence as a royal endorsement of the waters' qualities, with the embellishment that the spring had cured Bladud and his herd of pigs of leprosy through wallowing in the warm mud.

 

The name Sulis continued to be used after the Roman invasion, leading to the town's Roman name of Aquae Sulis ("the waters of Sulis"). The temple was constructed in 60-70 AD and the bathing complex was gradually built up over the next 300 years. During the Roman occupation of Britain, and possibly on the instructions of Emperor Claudius, engineers drove oak piles to provide a stable foundation into the mud and surrounded the spring with an irregular stone chamber lined with lead. In the 2nd century it was enclosed within a wooden barrel-vaulted building, and included the caldarium (hot bath), tepidarium (warm bath), and frigidarium (cold bath). After the Roman withdrawal from Britain in the first decade of the 5th century, these fell into disrepair and were eventually lost due to silting up, and flooding. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle suggests the original Roman baths were destroyed in the 6th century.

 

The baths have been modified on several occasions, including the 12th century when John of Tours built a curative bath over the King's Spring reservoir and the 16th century when the city corporation built a new bath (Queen's Bath) to the south of the Spring. The spring is now housed in 18th-century buildings, designed by architects John Wood, the Elder and John Wood, the Younger, father and son. Visitors drank the waters in the Grand Pump Room, a neo-classical salon which remains in use, both for taking the waters and for social functions. Victorian expansion of the baths complex followed the neo-classical tradition established by the Woods. In 1810 the Hot Springs failed and William Smith opened up the Hot Bath Spring to the bottom, where he found that the spring had not failed but had flowed into a new channel. Smith restored the water to its original course and the Baths filled in less time than formerly.

 

Pronto estará listo el diccionario que te permitirá conocer y asimilar con facilidad las 5000 palabras menos conocidas de la lengua española:

 

diccionariodeespanolconejemplosdeuso.blogspot.com/

 

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Ahora ya podrás evaluar tus conocimientos de español con estos nuevos y amenos juegos:

 

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-lengua/1-vocabulario

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-lengua/vocabulario-dificil

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-lengua/vocabulario-dificil-3

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-lengua/vocabulario-dificil-4

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-lengua/vocabulario-dificil-8

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-lengua/vocabulario-dificil-61

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-lengua/vocabulario-dificil-62

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-lengua/vocabulario-dificil-63

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-lengua/vocabulario-dificil-64

  

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Otro juego didáctico mío ya puede hallarse en este portal de cultura general:

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-ciencias/diversidad-faunistica

  

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Hace dos años terminé mi periplo por todos los municipios de Soria: una de esas provincias de la España vaciada que tanto atesoran (ahí dejo más de 200 fotos).

  

todoslospueblosdesoria.blogspot.com/

  

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Mi enciclopedia visual, a modo de banco de imágenes, ya cuenta con más de 1500 fotos como ésta:

  

enciclopediavisual.wordpress.com/2020/06/07/flor-3/

  

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Otras fotos mías también pueden contemplarse en mi trabajo “Todos los pueblos de Cataluña”:

  

todoslospueblosdecataluna.blogspot.com/?view=flipcard

  

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Ahí dejo unos enlaces para que pongas a prueba tus conocimientos sobre flora con 31 amenos juegos:

   

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-ciencias/flora-31

 

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-ciencias/flora-30

 

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-ciencias/flora-29

  

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Ahí dejo 5 juegos más para poner a prueba tus conocimientos sobre el mundo animal:

   

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-ciencias/mundo-animal-1

 

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-ciencias/mundo-animal-3

 

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-ciencias/mundo-animal-4

  

www.cerebriti.com/juegos-de-ciencias/mundo-animal-5

  

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Ahí dejo mi nuevo trabajo (El rincón del test cultural) para que pongas a prueba tus conocimientos:

   

elrincondeltestcultural.blogspot.com/

  

This is a photograph I took at Britten's chicane during the Hawthorn International Trophy race at the Vintage Sports Car Club's meeting at Oulton Park in June 2008. It's Barry Wood in his 1959 Lister Knobbly leading Tom Walker in his 1952 Allard J2X Le Mans. Brian Lister started producing sports cars in 1954 first with an MG engine and later with a Bristol engine, but he had the most success with the 1957 car which used the Jaguar D-type engine. The first version of this car was known at the time as a Lister-Jaguar, but after the 1959 car was given a smoother aerodynamic body designed by Frank Costin (and designed to use the Chevrolet Corvette powerplant) the more bulbous earlier car became known as the Lister Knobbly. Barry Wood's car has the 3,781cc version of the Jaguar XK6 engine and is chassis BHL117. The Allard J2X Le Mans was developed from the Allard J2 which had motor cycle style mudguards and the J2X was introduced to comply with 1952 FIA regulations which said that cars must have all-enveloping bodywork. Tom Walker's car has a 5,425cc Cadillac V8 engine.

Lister Jaguar Monza

Powell River, qathet Region, B.C.

 

Nikon Coolpix S31

Zoom-Nikkor 4.1-12.3mm ƒ/3.3-5.9

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