Not exact matches
Were he alive today, Churchill might use the same
words to describe Bitcoin — not only for its vaunted user anonymity, but also for the «rabbit
out of a
hat» way that bitcoins are created, valued, traded and secured.
The evangelist pulls meanings
out of words like rabbits from a silk
hat: born from above may mean born again; the wind that blows where it wills may just be the Spirit wafting through the empty regions
of our lives.
Most Artful Use
of the Blogging Format to Say Something Truly Beautiful: Kristin Tennant with «A
Hat That Says What Words Can't» «The hat is a small thing, but it's like strings of sentences not spoken or written, just worked out in yarn.&raq
Hat That Says What
Words Can't» «The
hat is a small thing, but it's like strings of sentences not spoken or written, just worked out in yarn.&raq
hat is a small thing, but it's like strings
of sentences not spoken or written, just worked
out in yarn.»
I can test and photograph recipes at the drop
of a
hat, but I try not to force
out posts because then it's just a frustrating struggle bus for me and probably comes across that way in my
words to you.
Equipped in every department with world - class calibre, Bayern always seemed to have a rabbit to pull
out of the
hat: a vital save from goalkeeper Manuel Neuer; the electrifying overlapping
of full - backs Philipp Lahm and David Alaba; or Brazilian centre - back Dante galvanising his colleagues by
word or deed.
And so when I, you know, did do the column, I rearranged the letters in his column Mathematical Games in order to spell a different pair
of words: Metamagical Themas, which is what my column was but it used the same letters, tipping my
hat to Martin Gardner, but at the same time saying I can't do what he did for 25 years so beautifully and, you know, that was how my column, you know, started
out.
i finished off the look with my denim jacket, because unlike the trucker -
hats i wore in college, good denim outerwear — in the
words of taylor swift, «never go [es]
out of style.»
The pack includes: · Two long colourful display banners
of «Pirates» and «Treasure Island» each decorated with pirate themed pictures · A colourful display border to print
out as many times as you need for use on a display board
of any size · An A4
word card - great to use when writing · Topic words - great to add to display or use in the writing area · Word and picture flashcards · Pirate posters - pictures of different pirates · Colouring pictures - a collection of pirate themed sheets for children to colour · Phoneme coins - all of the phonemes from the Letters and Sounds scheme on gold coins - great for display or to hide in the sand tray for the children to find the «treasure» · Alphabet coins - lower and upper case letters · Bingo - a pirate themed colourful bingo game to make and play · Skull and cross-bone bunting · Pirate phrases on posters · A pirate profile worksheet - draw your pirate and then decide what characteristics your pirate will have - three different versions of this for differentiation · Songs and rhymes about pirates · Play dough mats - can you make 3 more pieces of treasure, can you give the pirates new hats etc · Colourful treasure to cut out and use on displays, in the sand tray etc · Board game - move around the treasure island answering questions along the way to try and reach the treasure first - two levels of maths questions are provided as well as blank question cards · Two pirate themed wordsearches · «My pirate adventure» worksheet · Wanted posters for the children to fill in · Writing pages - Four A4 pages with pirate borders for the children to use when writing · Design a pirate flag worksheet · Search for the treasure game - collect coins along the way to fill your treasure chest · Cut and stick treasure map · Pirate acrostic poem · Speech bubble worksheets - write what you think the different pirates are saying · Counting cards up to 10 - count the number of pirate ships, telescopes etc · Design a pirate ship worksheet · Describe the treasure worksheet · A worksheet for the children to draw and write what they have spotted through the teles
word card - great to use when writing · Topic
words - great to add to display or use in the writing area ·
Word and picture flashcards · Pirate posters - pictures of different pirates · Colouring pictures - a collection of pirate themed sheets for children to colour · Phoneme coins - all of the phonemes from the Letters and Sounds scheme on gold coins - great for display or to hide in the sand tray for the children to find the «treasure» · Alphabet coins - lower and upper case letters · Bingo - a pirate themed colourful bingo game to make and play · Skull and cross-bone bunting · Pirate phrases on posters · A pirate profile worksheet - draw your pirate and then decide what characteristics your pirate will have - three different versions of this for differentiation · Songs and rhymes about pirates · Play dough mats - can you make 3 more pieces of treasure, can you give the pirates new hats etc · Colourful treasure to cut out and use on displays, in the sand tray etc · Board game - move around the treasure island answering questions along the way to try and reach the treasure first - two levels of maths questions are provided as well as blank question cards · Two pirate themed wordsearches · «My pirate adventure» worksheet · Wanted posters for the children to fill in · Writing pages - Four A4 pages with pirate borders for the children to use when writing · Design a pirate flag worksheet · Search for the treasure game - collect coins along the way to fill your treasure chest · Cut and stick treasure map · Pirate acrostic poem · Speech bubble worksheets - write what you think the different pirates are saying · Counting cards up to 10 - count the number of pirate ships, telescopes etc · Design a pirate ship worksheet · Describe the treasure worksheet · A worksheet for the children to draw and write what they have spotted through the teles
Word and picture flashcards · Pirate posters - pictures
of different pirates · Colouring pictures - a collection
of pirate themed sheets for children to colour · Phoneme coins - all
of the phonemes from the Letters and Sounds scheme on gold coins - great for display or to hide in the sand tray for the children to find the «treasure» · Alphabet coins - lower and upper case letters · Bingo - a pirate themed colourful bingo game to make and play · Skull and cross-bone bunting · Pirate phrases on posters · A pirate profile worksheet - draw your pirate and then decide what characteristics your pirate will have - three different versions
of this for differentiation · Songs and rhymes about pirates · Play dough mats - can you make 3 more pieces
of treasure, can you give the pirates new
hats etc · Colourful treasure to cut
out and use on displays, in the sand tray etc · Board game - move around the treasure island answering questions along the way to try and reach the treasure first - two levels
of maths questions are provided as well as blank question cards · Two pirate themed wordsearches · «My pirate adventure» worksheet · Wanted posters for the children to fill in · Writing pages - Four A4 pages with pirate borders for the children to use when writing · Design a pirate flag worksheet · Search for the treasure game - collect coins along the way to fill your treasure chest · Cut and stick treasure map · Pirate acrostic poem · Speech bubble worksheets - write what you think the different pirates are saying · Counting cards up to 10 - count the number
of pirate ships, telescopes etc · Design a pirate ship worksheet · Describe the treasure worksheet · A worksheet for the children to draw and write what they have spotted through the telescope
Every so often, some readers will pull your book
out of a
hat because it's on an also bought list or because Amazon sent
out word of your book through a targeted email.
As remarkable were the architect's 2014 artist commissions — the
word Paradise spelled
out with knives by Farhad Moshiri, Guy Limone's Red, Black and Grey - White Tapestry composed
of photocopies
of digital collages, and Erwin Wurm's sculpture
of Marino as a skeleton, wearing only his trademark
hat and coat.