Year 7hibs English

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KS2 English: Wisdom in Words

Year 7hibs English

(Engaging KS2 English revision quizzes to teach students in Year 3, Year 4, Year 5 and Year 6)

Use the list: Year 7 Spelling. Learn this spelling list using the 'Look, Say, Cover, Write, Check' activity. Spelling games using the word list: Year 7 Spelling. Test yourself using the 'Listen and Spell' spelling test. Print worksheets and activities using the word list: Year 7 Spelling. Year 7 English lessons (no rating) 0 customer reviews. Author: Created by beans0508. Visit author shop. Created: Mar 7, 2017. Creative writing/Storytelling/Sensory. Welcome to IXL's year 7 English page. Practise English online with unlimited questions in 106 year 7 English skills.

Fact: You can’t have jelly without whipped cream and sprinkles and you can’t have a successful education without a good understanding of English. We know there’s a lot to learn (the National Curriculum really likes to keep you on your toes, huh?) so we break everything down into nuggets of knowledge and present them to you in - ta dah! - a quiz.

Yep. Quizzes.

English quizzes that will test you and teach you and make you wonder what you were ever worried about. Concerned about the ginormous workload in English? From adverbs to clauses, grammar to comprehension, we’ll help you understand the basics of English and some of the more specialist stuff. It’s fun too. Not quite as fun as running around the garden with a pair of pants on your head, but not far off.

How will English help thy life? Let us count the ways.

Firstly, it will help you with spelling, which means you’re less likely to wish your Great Aunt Mildred a ‘Happee Burfday’ in her card. Because you’ll know it’s actually spelled, ‘Happy Birthday’. And with a bit of luck you’ll spell her name right too!

Next, you’ll be able to understand the English language a little better. You use it every day, so why not know all about the adverbs and conjunctions and suffixes and syllables? If you were a cook, you’d want to know about the ingredients you use to make cupcakes, wouldn’t you? Well, you speak English, so let’s examine our language a little more closely. (By the way, if you are a cook, please do send us cupcakes.)

We’ll cover reading and writing and grammar and everything else you need to know in KS2 English. There are also some great quizzes, like learning the difference between fact and opinion and learning how to use metaphors.

It’s a whirlwind of linguistic fun.

Writing hands at the ready!

For an all-round overview of KS2, take a look at our KS2 Explanation page.

Hibs TV presenter David Tanner has had a major pop at Celtic on live radio over last week’s postponement.

Several weeks ago it had been announced that Celtic’s home clash against Jack Ross’ side was to be put back two days. This was a request made by the Hoops that Hibs had declined. In the end, it was pushed back in any case.

The decision left Hibs Chief Executive Leeanne Dempster furious. The Leith sides would end up taking a 1-1 draw from the game after the Bhoys spent a week in Dubai.

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However, Tanner has stated that Celtic had asked Hibs on eight occasions to move the fixture as he got torn into the club on TalkSPORT. He also had some big digs at Neil Lennon, but sticking to the postponement, he said the following:

“They rode roughshod over due process, Celtic, because they asked Hibernian EIGHT times to move that game to Monday night so they could go to Dubai.

“Eight times Hibernian said no. So Celtic went to the SPFL, who invoked a rule that many hadn’t heard of. They should have heard of it in fairness, but they hadn’t heard of it, and they moved the game.

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“Now Hibernian were furious about that. That right away was a disaster area.”

Hibs TV man Tanner goes in on Celtic; should’ve been aware of the rules

Look, Celtic as a football club is an easy target right now. Every decision is being highly-scrutinised and it feels as though they can’t really do anything right at the moment.

However, Celtic don’t have to apologise for a rule being invoked that’s there to be invoked. An SPFL spokesman stated in the Herald back in November that “As has been the case for the past 22 years, SPFL policy, where two clubs do not agree about a fixture change and in the absence of any other relevant factor, is to favour the home club.”

If that policy is there to be invoked then Celtic were quite right to progress. There’s a difference between the moral aspect of it and whether Celtic had a legal right to have the fixture moved. SPFL policy dictates they did.

David Turnbull scored the opener in Celtic’s 1-1 draw with Hibernian (Photo by Craig Foy/SNS Group via Getty Images)

Hibs not knowing about the rule is their own fault. The only club they should be blaming is themselves.

Year 7hibs English Dub

Celtic, meanwhile, can look at themselves in the mirror and ask whether it was the right thing to do morally. For me, it wasn’t. If Hibs didn’t want to move the fixture in order to accommodate a jaunt to Dubai for Celtic, that’s an understandable position. And, for me, it’s one we should’ve accepted.

Year 7hibs English Subtitle

So Tanner is probably right to a point. Celtic should’ve kept the fixture as iit was and stayed in Scotland. But Hibs really should’ve been aware of the rules at the same time before their club employees vented their anger on social media.

Year 7hibs English

Year 7hibs English Subtitles

In other news, a Premiership club has responded to Neil Lennon’s accusations over a breach of Covid protocols.