This workbook lesson discusses names, occupations, and relationships. It includes exercises where students look at pictures and write occupations, names, relationships and addresses. Questions ask students to identify occupations, write sentences using possessive adjectives and nouns, and have conversations using relationship terms like classmate, neighbor, teacher. Forms are included to fill out names, titles, and contact information for people. Puzzles review vocabulary.Read less
When glue is applied in the binding line it is forced through to the middle of the sig, and if you crack open a notch bound book, you will find little bits of glue down the central edge of the gutter. As opposed to perfect binding, a notch bound book keeps the strength of the paper as part of its structure, so that the first two pages retain a paper link to the last two pages, etc. In page pull and flex testing this style of binding will show as stronger than others. The center four pages will obviously be the weakest pair of leaves, and are the ones tested: the glue will (if properly applied) provide a stronger bond here than the thread used in Smyth sewing, which will tear through the paper sooner than the glue bond will fail.
Symbols on patterns give a variety of information including cutting lines, stitching lines, alternation lines, button/buttonhole placement, fold lines and dots and notches, which help match the pieces during construction.
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