The Blog

Updates from across the site

May 8 ns April 25 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.

You are welcome to ask for my help with any of the materials on Clay Lane. Drop me a line via email to: nicholas@claylane.uk.

Add Vowels

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

gr

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More Add Vowels

Spinner

Make a sentence that uses ALL THREE of these words:

Eager. Luck. You.

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

More Spinners

For Today

Today May 8 (ns)

VE Day 3 Posts

VE Day is Victory in Europe Day, the commemoration of Germany’s surrender at the end of the Second World War. It is kept to this day (though with less and less pomp as each year goes by) on May 8th. The passage below collects a few of the more significant dates in the months that led up to the unconditional surrender signed at Berlin on that day (more or less) in 1945.

VE Day

On May 8th, 1945, Winston Churchill took to the radio to tell the British public that almost six years of war were ended.

1 Yesterday

In Two Minds

Join each group of ideas together to form a single sentence, in as many different ways as you can. You may change any words you like so long as the overall meaning remains the same. See if you can work in one or more of the words suggested.

1 Alf wanted to stay at the crime scene. He wanted to go home with the news. He could not decide what to do.

Between. Happen. Tear.

2 I sat for forty-five minutes. I could see the Ladies’ Room door. I never saw her come out.

Tell. Visible. Watch.

Sentences based on the novels of Dorothy L. Sayers. Developed from an exercise in Exercises 12-13 (1933) by NL Clay.

2 Tuesday

The First Traffic Lights

The first traffic lights in the world began operation outside the Houses of Parliament on December 9th, 1868. The previous evening, readers of the Express learnt about the ingenious if somewhat ungainly new technology, and looked forward to a time when all busy junctions would be made safe by traffic lights.

The First Traffic Lights

The busy crossroads outside the Houses of Parliament was the testing ground for a new technology.

3 Monday

Good Companions

Express in other words:

1 It is a consolation to the wretched to have companions in misery.

Publius Syrus (fl. 85-43 BC)

2 Every man is like the company he is wont to keep.

Euripides (?484-?407 BC)

4 Monday

The Rule of the Road

In 1917-18, Arthur Ransome (who would later write Swallows and Amazons) was in St Petersburg, then named Petrograd, reporting on the Communist revolution for the Daily News. One of his tales tickled fellow journalist Alfred Gardiner, who nonetheless drew from it a serious lesson about liberty, a word bandied about as carelessly then as it is today.

The Rule of the Road

Being a free citizen doesn’t mean that everyone else has to get out of your way.

5 Sunday

Blind Courage

Writing in 1905, American essayist George Santayana was full of admiration for the common soldier, and for the ordinary citizen who stands up to a bully. But to bellicose politicians and generals, and to anyone who romanticised war, he had some stern words to say.

Blind Courage

George Santayana reprimanded politicians and military men who thought war was good for the country’s soul.

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