We discovered that <one> has a homophone <won>. We understood why <won> is spelled with an <o> rather than a <u>. (Spell out <wun> and you get triple <u>!) And we investigated some relatives that share the base <one>: some + one --> someone, at + one --> atone, al + one --> alone. But what about <lonely>? How did <lone> become a base? Check out this video! Then head over to our Real Spelling page to check out two other fascinating videos by Gina Cooke about the spelling of words <doubt> and <true>!
Today, we talked about what we can learn from the first number we learned as a child: <one> We discovered that <one> has a homophone <won>. We understood why <won> is spelled with an <o> rather than a <u>. (Spell out <wun> and you get triple <u>!) And we investigated some relatives that share the base <one>: some + one --> someone, at + one --> atone, al + one --> alone. But what about <lonely>? How did <lone> become a base? Check out this video! Then head over to our Real Spelling page to check out two other fascinating videos by Gina Cooke about the spelling of words <doubt> and <true>!
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Quick LinksBrainpop Grade 3 at LCSWe are Class 3B in Accra. Check in regularly to see what we are up to! Archives
June 2016
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