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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 22 December 9 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.

h (7+6)

See Words

aah. ah. he. hi. hoe. hue. oh.

aha. eh. ha. hie. ooh. uh.

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 Key. Professional. Your.

2 Edge. Hair. Property.

3 Occur. Personal. Respond.

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

Christmas at Coverley Hall

Sir Roger explains why he makes Christmas such a special time for all his neighbours.

Sir Roger de Coverley, a Worcestershire baronet, was created by Richard Steele in The Spectator for March 2nd, 1711. Sir Roger was the quintessence of the English rural squire, hearty, sometimes buffoonish, but lovable. Here, he speaks about Christmas on his estates. Steele’s friend Joseph Addison wrote this piece, which began with a line from Ovid: Most rare is now our old simplicity.

Read

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

Winter is cold. Food is scarce in winter. Winter is hard on poor people. [Cruel. Lack. Year.]

Sir Roger invited in his neighbours every Christmas. They played parlour games. He liked to watch. [Custom. Guest. Spectator.]

Posted Yesterday

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1

Create sentences in which a particular consonant features prominently and frequently.

In Peter Piper's Practical Principles of Plain and Perfect Pronunciation (1936), Bruce Rogers (1870-1967) opened with this:

Peter Piper, without Pretension to Precocity or Profoundness, Puts Pen to Paper to Produce these Puzzling Pages, Purposely to Please the Palates of Pretty Prattling Playfellows, Proudly Presuming that with Proper Penetration it will Probably, and Perhaps Positively, Prove a Peculiarly Pleasant and Profitable Path to Proper, Plain and Precise Pronunciation. He Prays Parents to Purchase this Playful Performance, Partly to Pay him for his Patience and Pains; Partly to Provide for the Printers and Publishers; but Principally to Prevent the Pernicious Prevalence of Perverse Pronunciation.

This repetition of a consonant is called alliteration.

In Think and Speak (1929) NL Clay encouraged his pupils to create their own alliterative sentences. The consonants he recommended were: n, p, r, s, b, d, f, g, j, k and l. You could use this model:

Barry bought a bag of broken biscuits.
If Barry bought a bag of broken biscuits,
Where is the bag of broken biscuits Barry bought?

Posted December 20

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Richard Addinsell: Scrooge Suite

Music from the 1951 film Scrooge, starring Alastair Sim. Among the many lovely tunes are the Christmas carols ‘Hark the Herald Angels Sing’ and ‘Silent Night’, and the haunting folksong ‘Barbara Allen’.

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Posted December 19

1

Rewrite these conditional sentences in such a way that the word ‘if’ is not used.

Rewrite these sentences so that they do not use the word ‘if’. For example:

Plenty of time to get there if we take the tube.

→ By taking the tube, we can get there in plenty of time.
→ Let’s take the tube, so we don’t need to worry about getting there in time.
→ Provided we take the tube...
→ Unless we take the tube, we’ll be cutting it a bit fine.

1 If the terms of the treaty were made public, it would mean disaster.

2 If that does not succeed, don’t be discouraged.

3 If you get yourselves into trouble with the police, I can’t officially help you out of it.

Sentences taken from the novels of Agatha Christie.

Based on an exercise in Advanced English Exercises (1939) by NL Clay.

Posted December 17

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A profound Christmas hymn by Charles Wesley, welcoming the rising of the Sun of Righteousness.

There are few Christmas hymns to match this one, by Charles Wesley; yet it is rarely sung today. It deserves better. The central theme is the Sun of Righteousness from the prophecy of Malachi, who would dawn upon the faithful of Israel ‘with healing in his wings’.

Read

Posted December 16

1

Explain what these nouns tell us about our colleague John.

“John? Oh, he’s ________.”

What do we learn about John from these words?

IA hireling. IIA zealot. IIIA timeserver. IVA pedant. VA stoic. VIAn upstart. VIIA highbrow. VIIIA die-hard. IXA turncoat. XA plodder. XIA mouse. XIIA martinet. XIIIA broken reed. XIVA leader. XVA factotum. XVIA sycophant. XVIIA maverick. XVIIIMy right arm. XIXA plant.

Based on an exercise in Advanced English Exercises (1939) by NL Clay.

Posted December 16

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