The Blog

Updates from across the site

June 3 ns May 21 os

Clay Lane is inspired by educational materials created NL Clay, and used in English schools and homes from the 1920s to the 1960s. The Blog is a newsletter of recent additions and some selections from our archive, including brainteasers in grammar and vocabulary, and brief passages from history and literature.

Add Vowels

How many words can you make just by adding vowels to these consonants? See if you can get at least 6.

lrd

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Spinner

Make a sentence that uses ALL THREE of these words:

Helicopter. Promote. Nurse.

These words are served randomly.
You can change e.g. go → went, or quick → quickly.

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For Today

Today May 21 (os)

Meeting of the ‘Vladimir’ Icon (1521)

The Theotokos of Vladimir

Clay Lane

Introduction — The Theotokos of Vladimir is an icon of Mary embracing her child Jesus, which came to Kiev from Constantinople in the 1130s. Not only has it become one of the world’s most recognisable works of sacred art, but on several occasions it has been credited with delivering the Christians of Rus’ from seemingly inevitable disaster.

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For Today

Today May 21 (os)

Feast of St Godric of Finchale (1170)

When Godric Sang with Angels

Clay Lane

Introduction — St Godric of Finchale (?1065-1170) was a bed-ridden invalid near the end of a long and eventful life when Reginald, a monk from the nearby Durham Abbey, went to see him in his hermitage in a bend of the River Wear. It was a Saturday, the night before Easter Day. Back in the Abbey church, the monks were eagerly awaiting the sunrise, but Reginald had dozed off.

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1 Yesterday

Fairway

Use each noun below in two sentences, first as the subject, and then as the object of a verb. For example, rain → ‘The rain hasn’t stopped all day’ [subject]; ‘I shook the rain from my umbrella’ [object].

IBattle. IIEar. IIIFairway. IVJudge. VLevel. VIVideo.

2 Yesterday

England Expects

John Pasco

Introduction — On October 21st, 1805, the Royal Navy crushed a French and Spanish fleet at Cape Trafalgar, Spain. This permanently deprived Napoleon Bonaparte, the French Emperor, of sea-power, and ended his hopes of conquering Britain. Though Admiral Nelson died that day, his call to arms remains one of the best-known sentences in the English language. Here, Lieutenant John Pasco recalls how it was made.

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3 Yesterday

Running Late

Use the following as adverbial clauses in your own sentences. For example: Before he leaves → ‘I must speak to him [before he leaves]’.

An adverbial clause does the work of an adverb such as ‘immediately’ or ‘urgently’. Unlike these words, however, a clause has a subject and a verb in it, as a sentence does. So ‘immediately’ is an adverb, ‘as soon as possible’ is an adverbial phrase (no verb), but ‘as soon as I can’ is an adverbial clause.

IBefore he leaves. IIWhenever you like. IIIBetter than I do. IVBecause I’m late for a meeting. VSince you’re here. VIIf you see her. VIIUnless it’s raining.

Suggestions

The following sentences could be used with one or more of the adverbial clauses above.

Make sure he’s got his passport. Tell her where I am. Come and visit us. You can help with the washing-up. You know her. I can’t talk for long. We’ll have lunch in the garden.

4 Sunday

Peggy’s Dog

For reading aloud. These lines come from the comic poem Huggins and Duggins: A Pastoral after Pope by Thomas Hood (1799-1845). Huggins and Duggins are trading verses in praise of each one’s own best girl.

When Peggy’s dog her arms imprison,
I often wish my lot was hisn;
How often I should stand and turn,
To get a pat from hands like hern.

Note: The dialect words his’n (=his) and her’n (=hers) go back to Middle English hisen and hiren. The OED’s earliest evidence for his’n is from around 1425, in the Laud Troy-book, a poem about the Siege of Troy, by an unknown author.

5 Sunday

An Interruption

Report this snatch of conversation between Mr Wickham and his sister-in-law Elizabeth Bennet, without using direct speech.

“I am afraid I interrupt your solitary ramble, my dear sister:” said he, as he joined her.

“You certainly do,” she replied with a smile; “but it does not follow that the interruption must be unwelcome.”

From Pride and Prejudice (1813) by Jane Austen.

6 Saturday

Tender Plants

Albert, Prince Consort

Introduction — On May 3rd, 1851, Prince Albert spoke at a dinner in honour of the recently elected President of the Royal Academy, Sir Charles Lock Eastlake (1793-1865). The present company, the Prince admitted, were better placed to judge Sir Charles as an artist. But thanks to working so closely with him, he had learnt something about their new President that they might not know: how kindly he dealt with other artists.

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7 Saturday

Lost for Words

Join these ideas together into a single sentence, using ‘although’ or ‘though’ (or some other concessive). There may be many ways to do this: think of several, and choose the best.

1 She liked Clarissa. She could never think of anything to say to her.

2 Mrs Ambrose stood quite still. She stood much longer than is natural. The little boys let her be.

3 She was slightly eccentric in appearance. She was not untidy. Mrs Dalloway saw it with relief.

Based on sentences in the novels of Virginia Woolf (1882-1941).

Originals

1 She could never think of anything to say to Clarissa; though she liked her. [from ‘Mrs Dalloway’]

2 Although Mrs Ambrose stood quite still, much longer than is natural, the little boys let her be. [from ‘The Voyage Out’]

3 Mrs Dalloway saw with relief that though slightly eccentric in appearance, she was not untidy. [from ‘The Voyage Out’]