Parts of Speech Song
This is a song about parts of speech that is sung to the tune of a famous pop rock song. It is a non-professional production and the lighting is dark. These are some of the lyrics to the song:
Adverbs win, pronouns lose
Verbs were born to sing the blues
Oh, the sentence never ends,
It goes on and on and on and on.
Adverb clauses, being used incorrectly,
Their subjects, searching for a verb.
Colon issues, places other than your body.
Use them,
UST Libraries Poetry in the Parlor #7
O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library Thursday April 28, 2005 Noon
Dan Gjelten ("Hope" by Lisel Mueller"
Susan Alexander ("Crocuses" by Linda Pastan)
Tom Oscanyan ("Catch and The Base Stealer" by Robert Francis)
Linda Hulbert ("Wean Yourself" by Rumi)
Buffy Smith ("Mother to Son" by Langston Hughes)
Leslie Miller ("Zoo Keeper's Wife" by Sylvia Plath)
Jim Rogers ("The Weathering Angels of Ardmore" by Michael Coady)
Erika Scheurer ("We grow accustomed to the Dark—Franklin 428" by Emily D
Billie Holiday singing "What a Little Moonlight Can Do" 1958
Billie Holiiday singing live "What a little moonlight can do". Black and white video (3:09)
Conversations with a Geographer: Marie Price
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So, how does it feel to win?
Ashani Lewis (winner of the 2016 Christopher Tower Poetry competition) talks to one of the judges, Katherine Rundell, about how it feels to have won first prize.
Garageband Tutorial - How to use Garageband to make Music
In this ten minute Apple Garageband tutorial the various ways students and others can use Garageband to make presentations. The video moves rapidly and so it would be of benefit to stop the video after each element is explained.
Venezuela's Bizarre System of Exchange Rates Venezuela is currently going through its worst crisis in history, replete with an endless list of interesting problems. Foremost among these are severe shortages in even the most basic of necessities. Economists have used these shortages as textbook examples to illustrate the pernicious effects of price controls. Few people, however, are aware that many of the country’s problems are caused by a complex monetary arrangement that makes use of four different exchange rates simultaneo
Babbage: From headers to footies
Brain scans of American footballers reveal the darker side of contact sports and a new study on social media uncovers why we take selfies
New Greek and Roman Galleries
00:04:28
© 2000–2016 The Metropolitan Museum of Art. All rights reserved.
Breakingviews: HP strategy points to uncertain future
Aug. 19 - Hewlett Packard's shares slumped today and the decline wiped around $14.5 billion off the company's market value. Reuters Breakingviews columnist Robert Cyran says shareholders are panicking.
Open Classroom 12/01/2011 - #2 Rosengren Presentation
The Role of Government in the 21st Century
This week: How much should government regulate business?
Guest Speakers: Eric Rosengren and John Kwoka
《獨特的視野——羅聘的藝術世界》 [Chinese]
00:04:23
© 2000–2017 The Metropolitan Museum of Art. All rights reserved.
1.6.1 Introduction The process of keeping up-to-date in your chosen subject area is useful for your studies and afterwards, for your own personal satisfaction, or perhaps in your career as part of your continuing professional development. There are a great many tools available that make it quite easy to keep yourself up to date. You can set them up so that the information comes to you, rather than you having to go out on the web looking for it. Over the next few pages, you will be experimenting with some
Special Exhibition: Pablo Bronstein at the Met
00:11:18
© 2000–2016 The Metropolitan Museum of Art. All rights reserved.
Special Exhibition: Guitar Heroes: Legendary Craftsmen from Italy to New York
00:09:17
© 2000–2016 The Metropolitan Museum of A
New Acquisition: Messerschmidt's A Hypocrite and Slanderer
00:07:41
© 2000–2016 The Metropolitan Museum of Art. All rights reserved.
Special Exhibition—Afghanistan: Hidden Treasures from the National Museum, Kabul
00:10:00
© 2000–2016 The Metropolitan Mus
Eureka! Episode 2 - Mass
Building on the concept of inertia, Eureka! adds the factor of mass, tells how it's measured, and shows how it differs from size. Concept: Inertia increases with mass. Eureka was a series of short cartoons on physics that ran on public television in the 1980's. The video explains the concept in simple and well illustrated way. Good for students of any elementary school level.
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