When it is time to play, Dot and Dash look everywhere for their friend Tiny, but they cannot find him, although they find lots of other friends along the way.
Telecommunications is a major global industry, and this unique book chronicles the development of this complex technology from the electric telegraph to the Internet in a simple, accessible, and entertaining way. The book opens with the early years of the electric telegraph. The reader will learn how the Morse telegraph evolved into an international network that spanned the globe, starting with the development of international undersea cables, and the heroic attempts to lay a trans-Atlantic cable. The book describes the events that led to the invention of the telephone, and the subsequent disputes over who had really invented it. It takes a look at some of the most important applications that have appeared on the Internet, the mobile revolution, and ends with a discussion of future key developments in the telecommunications industry.
Dot and Dash are back for even more in this interactive books for preschoolers! Dot and Dash are ready to play with their toys-but they don't want to share with their friends. When their poor teddy bear is torn, the two get a time-out. With a minute to think it over, Dot and Dash are ready to play again, and this time, SHARE! In the second story, Dot is making a kite to share with Big, Tall, and Small. Dash helps find all the materials. And when the kite gets stuck in a tree, the friends help Dot and Dash get it free!
Learn easy, efficient tricks for piecing irresistible quilt tops with precuts and leftover fabric scraps, and discover 18 machine-quilting motifs you can mix and match. Award-winning quilter and designer Christa Watson guides you through 11 skill-building projects with quilting designs in three categories: walking-foot, free-motion, and a combination of the two techniques. Christa is here to help you start and finish strong!
It's time for bed, but Dot and Dash don't want it to be! Dash doesn't want to take a bath. Dot doesn't want to brush his teeth. But when it's time to turn out the lights, having a friend nearby makes it much easier to say good night!
The verdict is in: preschoolers love Dot and Dash Dot and Dash are eating dinner, but Dash only wants to eat pink food. Big, Tall, and Small all think dinner is delicious. But what will Dash do when it's time for dessert?
Prepare to enter a world where nothing is ever quite what it seems, where elephants squat in living rooms, plastic ducks fall from the skies and even the rabbits can’t be trusted. The fifty-eight stories in Jonathan Pinnock’s Scott Prize-winning collection Dot Dash show a vivid yet disciplined imagination at work.These stories, many of which have individually won prizes, are populated by a rich variety of characters, including a tightrope-walking couple with marital issues, a graffiti artist with an agenda and an interviewee who’s about to find out some awkward truths about himself. Very few of them turn out to be completely innocent, and none of them remains unaffected by the experience.Jonathan Pinnock’s unashamedly entertaining fictions explore what happens when the macabre and the absurd crash headlong into everyday life. As writer Tania Hershman says, he ‘isn’t content to just pull back the curtain, but sets fire to it and chuckles as it blazes’. With this incendiary first collection, he invites readers to pull up a chair and watch the flames rise.
Dot and Dash love to play in this action-packed novelty book. With sturdy tabs to push and pull on every spread, a giant pop-up finale and a foiled cover with die-cuts to peep through, this new Dot and Dash adventure will capture the imagination of toddlers and preschoolers everywhere
Its in the book. Jim Nelson Did you know? Each king in a deck of playing cards represents a great king from history: Spades - King David, Clubs - Alexander the Great, Hearts - Charlemagne, and Diamonds - Julius Caesar. "When possums are playingpossium, they are not playing. They actually pass out from sheer terror. "In the 1940s, the FCC assigned televisions channel 1 to mobile services, two-way radios in taxicabs, etc. They never did assign any other channels. Thats why our TVs today start with channel 2. "Hersheys Kisses are called that because the machine that makes them looks like its kissing the conveyor belt. "The reason firehouses have circular stairways is from the days when horses pulled the fire engines. The horses were stabled on the ground floor and figured out how to walk up straight stairways. "The only two days of the year that do not have any professional sports games, MLB, NBA, NHL, or the NFL are the day before and the day after the Major League Baseball All-Star Game. I have not failed. Ive just found ten thousand ways that wont work. Thomas Edison