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You don't... That's illegal.

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Q: How do you tackle students writing dirty graffiti on walls?
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usually for mouthing off to the ref, or unnecessary roughness or a dirty tackle or a late tackle or even stalling, or many other things


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Anything that is dirty or has pictures or writing, must be removed before salah.


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Can one end a question with a no eg This house is dirty comma no?

This question is an example of the significant difference between common spoken English and the more formal written English. Here's the situation: A certain house is dirty. The speaker or writer is seeking agreement or approval for his/her statement that this house is dirty. In colloquial spoken English, the speaker states that this house is dirty. Immediately following the word 'dirty' the speaker's voice rises, as it does when asking a question. Whether the final word is 'no,' 'right,' 'huh,' or (as we Canadians tend to say) 'eh,' the meaning is the same: Agreement is being sought to the statement about the house being dirty. When writing such a statement and seeking approval thereof, it would be phrased in a more formal manner. Examples might be, "Don't (or Wouldn't) you agree this house is dirty?" or simply, "Isn't this house dirty?" When writing formally, it would not be considered acceptable to make a statement followed by an approval-seeking word such as 'no' unless it was part of a quote. Formal writing does not mean 'high-falutin.' It simply means writing according to generally accepted standards. Such generally accepted standards can be found in dozens, perhaps hundreds, of books about English grammar. (Of course, what goes on in chat rooms, instant messaging, and text messaging can hardly be described as formal writing. There, it seems, anything goes.)


Who sings will you be my dirty dirty i need a dirty?

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Who wrote the declamation dirty hands other than john delaney?

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Movie with dirty in its title?

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What are the effects of graffiti on the environment?

Graffiti has horrible effects on the environment. Not only does it make your surroundings increasingly more dirty. But the arousal spray destroys the earths ozone which causes the heat to be able to get to the earth more efficiently and destroys the polar ice cap. But not only that the fumes from the paint damages the air we breathe and that can directly effect our lungs but that's not the worst of our concerns in about 50 years, the snow will all be gone... Forever!


How do you feel about the step by step writing process?

Finally, a question I can get behind. I would appreciate that this answer remain complete as I submitted it in the interest of fairness and respect. The asker is looking for personal opinion.The writing process is, in my opinion, a simplistic attempt, and in no small part laziness on the part of some teachers, to get students to write. By breaking it down into reproducible steps, it is believed that students will then be able to produce original writing samples. It is the "teaching a man to fish" method of writing pedagogy. However, it is anything but teaching. It is training, nothing more. The use of the writing process in teaching produces essentially trained chimps. It espouses the five paragraph essay, and usually produces nothing more.What the writing process does not do is respect the student. Students are people. People communicate. We attempt to communicate nearly from the moment of our birth. 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Why then create a totally artificial form of lesson to teach its extension?In my personal experience, my students made greater strides in developing their writing skills when I gave them examples of my own writing. I gave them the opportunity to see what their teacher did. I gave them, also, the opportunity to see what their fellow students could do. Most importantly, I encouraged them to put words on paper, and I showed appreciation and external validation for every piece of writing my students produced.I developed a writing exercise that gave them time to put their thoughts down in what ever form those thoughts took. I created a collection of fifty writing prompts for which they produced anything from a single sentence to multiple pages in response. I never graded the content or form of their writing from these prompts, only their participation, and eventually the development of their writing skills as determined by their level of participation. I began with the following as their first writing prompt:The prompt was printed on an overhead slide and was displayed for students as they entered the room. I remained silent in response to any questions; I simply pointed at the screen and the displayed instructions. This was as follows:For the next five minutes, you will answer the following question. Your work will be graded by your level of participation--that is, how you put words on paper--not by the content or appearance of those words. You will remain silent during this exercise and until the five minute time limit has elapsed. The question you must answer is:How would you answer this question?Honestly, my students sometimes got frustrated by the exercise. I had one student who wrote his name over and over for two pages. He was stunned when he earned full credit for the effort. He, after all, performed by the literal expectations of the exercise. Many students began by writing, "I don't know how to answer the question because there is no question to answer," or something similar.As the writing prompts progressed, and the students learned that any response they gave was valid provided it was what they actually thought, they began to perform at higher and higher levels. The fifty-first writing prompt that my students received at the end of the year was the same as the first. Every year I taught, it produced the same effect: at the end of the five minute time limit, students were raising their hands, asking for more time. Five minutes turned in to ten, then twenty, then thirty. The longest time I ever gave for completing that last prompt was the full hour, and several students in that class voluntarily took their work home to complete it.Was it effective? Very! Of five years of teaching students who took the writing portion of the MEAP, my students improved anywhere from 12% to 35% over the previous year's students. 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Which are some good websites for football fans?

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