Mr. Sir made a backpack out of a sunflower seed sack. This inventive creation reflects his resourcefulness and ability to repurpose materials in the harsh environment of Camp Green Lake. The backpack symbolizes both survival and the harsh realities faced by the boys at the camp.
the sumerians should be the oldest scientists
15
After Mr. Sir quit smoking, he ate sunflower seeds. He believed that they helped him quit.
That he stole them and ate them him self
Because they are his substitute for smoking.
Zigzag stole Mr. Sir's sunflower seeds in the book "Holes" by Louis Sachar. He took them without permission and caused trouble for Mr. Sir by eating them all. This led to consequences for Zigzag and the other boys in the camp.
Sir Seed Solarbot Grassbomb Seederrs Sgt.Seed
Sir Jonathan Sacks reviews Olive Sack's book Musicophilia http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/faith/article3290320.ece and states that he is, alas, not a relative.
Nothing, the warden hurts Mr. Sir for coming to her for something not important, Stanley gets let off
Actually neither coffee nor tea were available in Britain before 1650, well after Shakespeare's day. Mild ale was safer to drink than water and much more common. From Shakespeare's works, and especially in the dialogues of the notorious tipplers Sir Toby Belch and Sir John Falstaff we know that an extremely popular drink was sack, fortified dry white Spanish wine, the modern equivalent being Sherry. Sometimes this was heated by thrusting a hot Poker into it, and in such cases it was called "burnt sack". Sir Toby says "Come, come, I'll go burn some sack. 'Tis too late to go to bed now." Twelfth Night, Act II Scene 3)
No
You can't sir