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St George, ca. 1450, Church of St Peter and St Paul, Pickering. St George is the Patron Saint of Clay Lane. See About St George.

© Michael Garlick, Geograph. CC BY-SA 2.0. Source

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Clay Lane

Blog

New posts, old posts, and a few brainteasers

December 26 December 13 OS
Welcome to the Clay Lane blog

This page keeps you up-to-date with recent additions, alerts you to posts you may have missed, and invites you to tackle exercises similar to those NL Clay gave to pupils aged 12-13 in the 1930s.

Add Vowels Every DayThink and Speak

Make as many words as you can by adding vowels (AEIOU) to these consonants.

pls (13+2)

See Words

pails. pales. pals. peals. peels. piles. pleas. please. plies. plus. poles. pools. pulse.

opals. pilaus.

Spinners Every DayThink and Speak

Pick any group of three words, and see if you can still remember them in an hour, and still remember them tomorrow. For a further challenge, try using all of your three words together in a single sentence.

The words in this puzzle are taken randomly from a list of 927 common words. You can change e.g. cat → cats, go → went, quick → quickly.

1 Citizen. Remember. Their.

2 Back. Modern. Site.

3 Bag. Fight. Wrong.

Variations: 1. include direct and indirect speech 2. include one or more of these words: although, because, despite, either/or, if, unless, until, when, whether, which, who 3. use negatives (not, isn’t, neither/nor, never, nobody etc.)

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1

Leroy Anderson: Christmas Festival

Media not showing? Let me know!

Posted Yesterday

2

Make as many words as you can using the letters of one nine-letter word. Can you beat our score?

A Polyword is a game with words and letters. Make words of four letters or more from the letters of a nine-letter word, using each letter only once. Include the highlighted letter in every word you make. Can you beat our score?

Play

Posted Yesterday

3

The Landmarks of Time

Izaak Walton recalls how George Herbert summarised the major feasts of the Church year.

George Herbert was for a few brief years parish clergyman in Bemerton, Wiltshire. Sensitive and artistic, but stubborn in good principles, he was much loved by his parishioners. Here, Izaak Walton recalls how Herbert expounded the purpose and chief feasts of the Christian calendar, from Christmas to Pentecost.

Read

Join each group of ideas together to make a single sentence, in as many ways as you can.

The Church year has several feasts. George Herbert selected the most important. He explained what they mean. [Interpret. Significance. Some.]

Christ was born in Bethlehem. Three Persian Magi came looking for him. The Church remembers it on January 6th. [Every. Town. Where.]

Herbert explained the Church year. Walton was impressed. He recorded Herbert’s explanation. [So. Strike. Write.]

Posted Yesterday

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4

And We Beheld his Glory

In a sermon for Christmas Day, St Bede confronts his brethren with the truth about Mary’s wonderful child.

In his Gospel, St John tells us that Mary’s child was actually God himself. From early times, the shock of this simple proposition was too much, even for very senior clergy, and they retreated into hair-splitting qualifications to escape it. The eighth-century English monk Bede, in a Christmas sermon, reminded his brethren of what happened to that child later.

Read

Join this group of ideas together to make a single sentence, in as many ways as you can.

Jesus was a man. Jesus was God. Mary gave birth to him. [Baby. Both. Only.]

Posted December 24

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5

Use these similar-sounding words in sentences and show the difference between them.

Use correctly in sentences:

IIt’s. IIIts. IIIWho’s. IVWhose. VWere. VIWe’re. VIIThere’s. VIIITheirs. IXLets. XLet’s.

Posted December 23

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6

‘Alpha of the Plough’ thought the Victorians understood Christmas and New Year better than we do.

Writing in full knowledge of the horrors of the Great War, columnist Alfred Gardiner found early twentieth-century sneering towards the past a little hard to bear. The kind of progress we had made, he said, had not given us that right, and it was particularly grating to hear the moderns scorn their grandparents’ idea of how to keep Christmas and New Year.

Read

Join each group of ideas together to make a single sentence, in as many ways as you can.

People disparage the previous generation. Every generation does it. The next one will disparage ours. [Compare. Past. Parent.]

We send each other cards at Christmas. We write greetings in them. They reflect society’s values. [Exchange. Reveal. Wish.]

Posted December 23

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