Smoggy's Christmas (Short story for Early Readers): A story about helping others

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Smoggy's Christmas (Short story for Early Readers): A story about helping others

Smoggy's Christmas (Short story for Early Readers): A story about helping others

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Smoggy appeared in their last race of the season at the Razzway GP. Smoggy ended up leading the race for all but one lap, and won their first ever Marbula One Grand Prix. The team regained their lead in the standings, 14 points clear of the Savage Speeders. Smoggy also took the lead in the individual Racers' Championship standings. Unfortunately, Hazy did not perform very well at Midnight Bay GP,finishing in 8th. Meanwhile, Speedy went on to win the race. As a result, the Hazers missed out on the Teams' Championship while Smoggy dropped to third in the final standings of the individual Racer's Championship. After Marbula One Season 2 ended, the Hazers received an invitation from the Balls of Chaos to compete in the Cranthym Challenges that featured a mix between sports and puzzles. The tournament included some teams in Marble League such as the O'rangers, the Pinkies and the Kobalts. The team managed to get first in the first challenge, ninth in the second one, a 2nd place, a 6th-place and a 9th place followed. Then came an 8th, a 5th and an 11th. At this point the team has got 37 points and were sitting in third place. Guild of Wit were in first, the Balls of Chaos were in second and the team was tied with the Whizlers. The Hazers managed to get gold in the penultimate challenge and got 5th in the last challenge, but Whizler's gold in the final event was not enough for the team to win the tournament. The team finished the tournament in 2nd, just one point behind the Whizlers. In middle of May, Smoggy participated in Marble League 2021 Practice Race and got 11th. During the offseason, Smoggy took part in the Amazing Maze Marble Race along with the team, where the team surprised fans by getting eliminated in the heats. Square–nurse merger: the vowel in word, heard, nurse, etc. is pronounced in the same way as in square, dare. This is [ɛː]. [11] [12]

Then, as a local, there are the internal subtleties. The lingo of East Cleveland, although linked, is still totally recognisable from that of downtown Middlesbrough or Eston. And, even a few decades ago, someone with a sharp ear could still make a fairly good guess as to which town or village a person came from just by their voice. Then, the Loftus accent was not the Guisborough twang, and what was said in Brotton was not the same thing as Lingdale chat. I guess the same was and is very much the case in Co Durham, or on the Wear, Tyne and the Tees. Many roots She said: “Whilst coal burning is reduced, we have quite extensive laws in place to protect our air quality, pollution is now coming from things which are transport. a b Kerswill, Paul (23 July 2018). "Dialect formation and dialect change in the Industrial Revolution: British vernacular English in the nineteenth century". In Wright, Laura (ed.). Southern English Varieties Then and Now. De Gruyter. pp.8–38. ISBN 9783110577549. Recently NE Bylines ran a piece on so-called ‘malapropisms’ and how they accidentally shape our way of speaking. And that got me thinking about how our language constantly evolves. Just listen to any newsreel recording from the 1940s or 1950’s – just a lifetime away. The strangled vowels of their received pronunciation (RP) English seem to be thousands of miles away from what we hear around us nowadays.

smog

Exhibition showcases work of Teesside artists". Middlesbrough Borough Council. 1 June 2013 . Retrieved 2 October 2013. I know there’s problems with traffic congestion and things like that, but that doesn’t seem to be reflected in your graphs. In conservative forms of the dialect make and take are pronounced mek and tek ( [ˈmɛk] and [ˈtɛk]). These contrast with the Sunderland and Durham variants mak and tak but are counterintuitively shared with broad Geordie. [10] The START vowel is typically more fronted than in upper North East varieties, thus park is typically pronounced [paːk].

Marco Del Castillo, a Smoggys Founder, said: “It is down to the support of our nation, that Smoggys has come to life as an operating business, set to make a real difference. With the fires continuing to rage, the smoke blanketing our skies and our volunteers out there giving it their all, the launch of Smoggys couldn’t have come any sooner.This record has been broken by 6 athletes, the current one was set by Sea from the Oceanics in SD21 Hancox, Dan (10 September 2009). "How is Britain coping with the recession? - Middlesbrough - Smoggies steel themselves". New Statesman . Retrieved 2 October 2013. Originally, this was a term of abuse for supporters of Middlesbrough F.C. coined by their Sunderland A.F.C. counterparts. The name was meant to refer to the heavy air pollution once produced by the local petrochemical industry, [1] [2] and from Dorman Long. [3] Though, at first, Smoggie was used as a pejorative term, it has become an example of reappropriation with many people now proudly calling themselves 'Smoggies'. [1] Current usage [ edit ] From where I live, I’m not so sure. The Teesside accent or the East Cleveland dialect are tough old beasts, and I think will easily withstand any try-ons from the other linguistic tribes.For what it’s worth, I think the boundary between the two accents of ‘pitmatic’ Geordie and Teesside is one of the sharpest in the country. A journey across the fields for just two or three miles – from, say, Hartlepool to Horden, or Darlington to Shildon – straddles one of the great dialect boundaries in the UK. Village by village

We should be getting that out not only to the people of Middlesbrough but people outside of the town to say ‘come to Middlesbrough, it’s a healthier place to live than quite a lot of places’.” Read More Related Articles Moving into the 1980s, we’re looking at some very different things and these are linked to our change in practices. In the small terraced Skelton street I lived in up to a couple of years ago, there were men and women whose birthplace was Ireland, Suffolk, Cornwall, Durham and Lancashire. Elements of their native accents and phraseology fused with the local twang to produce what we now know and love.Ms Hedgley said: “What we’re looking at is getting the best air possible.” Read More Related Articles Australia is about to hit peak-Summer, which means that the fires are likely to continue for months and the public services and charities will need support over the long-term. If you’d like to assist with bushfire recovery, relief and rescue efforts, please explore the options below: She added that future changes such as a move towards electric cars would have the effect of reducing the figures further and that, as an environmental health officer, she would always recommend trying to reduce levels of pollutants.

But, as I said at the beginning, our language is still poetry in motion. Research by Prof Carmen Llamas We know, wearing P2 masks isn’t something Aussies are used to. But then again, we aren’t used to having our air quality compared to the folks in countries who need to wear them, either,” the GoFundMe says. We don’t have lead in our petrol but we do have diesel vehicles and we’re now looking at moving away from diesel to even more low emission type vehicles.” On Wednesday, Middlesbrough Council’s Economic Development, Environment and Infrastructure Scrutiny Panel heard the good news from principal public protection officer, Paul MacGregor, and Judith Hedgley, head of public protection.Like most North East dialects, the definite article is always full and never reduced to t' as in the Yorkshire dialect. Despite jibes about smog, air quality in Middlesbrough is “good” and pollution is getting ever lower, a meeting has heard. Dictionary of Middlesbrough and Teesside Accent Dialect and Slang". Love Middlesbrough - Middlesbrough Borough Council. 2012–2014. Archived from the original on 16 November 2018 . Retrieved 5 July 2014.



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