You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
A Latin reader like no other. Legonium is both a town and a tale. It is a town built entirely from LEGO® bricks, and filled with an incredible cast of characters. There is Marcellus, the struggling artist; Augustus, the bank manager; Miranda, the police officer; Monas Bricvir, the private detective; plus a suspicious character spotted on the roof of the town bank; and, of course, Pico, the cat.And it is a tale told completely in Latin, with a full range of grammatical structures, repetition of vocabulary, hundreds of pictures, and a supplementary English translation. There is a police chase, a trip to Pompeii, a talkative parrot, and a mysterious suitcase.
None
Stephen Lewis (ca.1778-1855) moved from Virginia to Shelby County, Kentucky during or before 1800, moved to Knox County, Indiana, and married twice (once in Kentucky, once in Indiana). Descendants lived in Kentucky, Indiana and elsewhere. Includes genealogical data for over 500 other Lewis families (where the author "... has not been able to find the link") throughout the United States.
None
This book, first published in 1987, studies the practical and intellectual import of China's educational relations with the industrialised West, the Soviet Union and Japan. On the practical level, it provides a broad historical and philosophical context within which the possibilities and dangers inherent in China's educational involvement with developed countries may be considered. The book tests the theory that education transfers from the developed to the developing world have been used to consolidate political domination and economic exploitation by providing a detailed and provocative historical analysis of China's relations with the major developed nations.
None
Contains the 4th session of the 28th Parliament through the 1st session of the 48th Parliament.