Phoebe and Her Unicorn by Dana Simpson for November 19, 2013

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    Robotech_Master  over 10 years ago

    It’s a good question.

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    Monster Hesh  over 10 years ago

    They merely wish to discern if you fit in a square hole, a round hole, or go straight to the reject bin.

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    luducks  over 10 years ago

    Her accent is improving!

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    silverfingers  over 10 years ago

    I guess I deserve the same omen: it’s the first time I see the word “glean”…

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    Nebulous Premium Member over 10 years ago

    Come on! How do you expect people to know a word like ‘glean’ if they don’t live on a farm and harvest grain?

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    kaykeyser  over 10 years ago

    What ever you do don’t put any thing on the test about unicorns. Also when in doubt always answer C. you can’t go wrong with C.

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  7. Phoebe
    kaykeyser  over 10 years ago

    Though what I like is when teachers write there own tests. some times they have a seance of hummer or make mistakes, What I hate on tests is when more then one answer is right or when you have to show your work.

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    John W Kennedy Premium Member over 10 years ago

    Actually, it’s even harder than that. The usual reference is to poor people from the village coming in after the field has been harvested and getting what they can from the leftovers. In an era of hand-reaping and of peasants or serfs working for large landowners, that was an important part of the economy, but with modern harvesting machines and large farms, and all the (more or less) peasants living in the big city, anyway, it’s pretty much vanished in the First World. The only place a modern kid is likely to encounter that sense of the word is in the Book of Ruth, or in the earlier passages of the Bible where the Israelites are specifically told that they mustn’t go back over their fields—whatever they missed the first time belongs to the poor.

    But, of course, it’s still found in its metaphorical sense, as Marigold is using it here: to gather up small chunks of something—“something” almost always being information, nowadays.

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    Hag5000  over 10 years ago

    Someone needs a dictionary for Christmas.

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    John W Kennedy Premium Member over 10 years ago

    Actually, I gravely doubt that an eight-year-old would understand Marigold’s use of the word, based merely on its occurrences in the KJV.

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