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Tag Archives: Toronto
A World Discovered: Unit 1
A World Discovered – by L.A ‘Code’ & E. L. Daniher Illustrated by M. ‘Lovejoy’ & S. Flannery Published by J.M. Dent & Sons Worldcat Identities: A World … Continue reading
Posted in Inventions
Tagged A World Discovered, August 1954, August 1960, August 1963, August 1964, British, Canada, December 1957, E L Daniher, England, geography, Into the Antarctic, Into the Arctic, Into the Dark Continent, J M Dent and Sons Canada Limited, L A Code, M. Lovejoy, Ontario, Publishing, S. Flannery, The Secrets of the Frozen Seas, The South Seas, The the East Round Africa, The West Learns About The East, Through the Darkest Africa, To the East Across the Atlantic, To the East by Cape Horn, Toe the East Through the Arctic, Toronto, UK, Vancouver
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Public School Grammar – Canada Publishing Company (Limited) 1899
The Public School Grammar textbook issued in the Province of Ontario in the City of Toronto by H. L. Strang, B.A., Principal Goderich Collegiate Institute and published by Canada Publishing Company (Limited) 1899 – front cover to Page 7 … Continue reading
Posted in Linguistics
Tagged Act of Parliament, adjectives, articles, Canada Publishing Company Limited 1899, case, comparison, conjuctive, demonstrative, derivation and composition, English grammar, finite verbs, gender, indefinite, indicative, inflection, interjections, interrogative, language, Linguistics, Minister of Agriculture, Minister of Education, moods, nouns, number, Ontario, passive, peculiar words and classes of words, personal, personification, phrases, pleonasm and ellipses, prepositions, pronouns, Public School Grammar, sentence, sequence and tenses, shall and will, sounds and letters, subject and predicate, the infinite, Toronto, transitive and intransitive, verbs
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Charles Dickens’ Visit To Niagara Falls, Canada
He saw this “beautiful girl of twenty who had been in jail for several years.” She had, he wrote, “quite a lovely face though there was a lurking devil in her bright eyes which looked out pretty sharply from between her prison bars.” Continue reading
Posted in Literature
Tagged Charles Dickens, Kingston, Montreal Quebec, Niagara Falls, Niagara Gorge, Poet's Corner, steamboat, Toronto, train, Westminster Abbey
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