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Spelling Term 1 Week Four
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PRESENTATION OUTLINE
1.
SPELLING📚
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utnapistim
2.
FLEECE
COVERING FOR SHEEP OR GOATS SENTENCE:AT THE DEPARTMENT STORE, WE GOT FLEECE JACKETS
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Dave_S.
3.
FLEECE
FLEECE : NOUN PLURAL NOUN : FLEECES
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Dave_S.
4.
FLEECE WORD ORIGIN
Old English flēos, flēs, of West Germanic origin; related to Dutch vlies and German Vlies .
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Alan Cleaver
5.
APPEAL
MAKING A VERY IMPORTANT REQUEST SENTENCE:IN THE COURT HEARING, THE VICTIMS BROTHER REQUESTED THE COURT HEARING
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jkdjulia
6.
APPEAL
PART OF SPEECH :VERB
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jkdjulia
7.
APPEAL WORD ORIGIN
Middle English (in legal contexts): from Old French apel (noun), apeler (verb), from Latin appellare ‘to address’, based on ad- ‘to’ + pellere ‘to drive’.
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KJGarbutt
8.
BEAQUEATH
LEAVE THINGS IN A WILL MAINLY PROPERTY SENTENCE:BILL WAS GERALD’S GRANDSON WHO DIED LAST WEEK AND LEFT HIS MANSION IN BILLS WILL
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louiscrusoe
9.
BEAQUEATH
NOUN
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louiscrusoe
10.
BEAQUEATH WORD ORIGIN
Old English becwethan, from be- ‘about’ (expressing transitivity) + cwethan ‘say’
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popofatticus
11.
colleague
A FREIND OR PARTNER FROM WORK SENTENCE:ALICE AND TILLY ARE COLLEAGUES AT AN ORCHESTRA
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JD Hancock
12.
COLLEAGUE
noun noun: colleague; plural noun: colleagues
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JD Hancock
13.
COLLEAGUE WORD ORIGIN
early 16th century: from French collègue, from Latin collega ‘partner in office’, from col- ‘together with’ + legare ‘depute’.
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Horia Varlan
14.
THANK YOU FOR WATCHING
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Trey Ratcliff
Bede O'Connell
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