Drop Them Both!
4
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Practice Words
Words containing the digraph 'th', producing either the unvoiced /ΞΈ/ or voiced /Γ°/ sound.
both
smooth
than
the
them
then
they
thing
think
thinks
this
thrusts
Page 1
The Boy sat on the hill. He held up a stone and a feather. Then he will drop them both.
Page 2
Then an elephant grips the smooth stone. The sun is hot, but the stone is not. It will not snap!
Page 3
'This thing has mass!' says The Boy as he thrusts at the elephant. He thrusts and thrusts, but the elephant just sits still.
Page 4
But the feather? The feather does not have a lot of mass. It is thin and soft in his hand.
Page 5
The Boy thrusts the rock up with both hands. How much mass is in this rock? He must think and think.
Page 6
This man has a set of scales!
Page 7
Dad fills this flask with water, up to the top. 'This is one kilogramme!' he says. One flask, one kilogramme.
Page 8
Dad says, 'Think of this. Ten cows or 200 dogs. Will the dogs win, or the cows?'
Page 9
The world is so big. Can they get the mass of this big thing? The Boy must think and think.
Page 10
A lot more flasks than this!
Page 11
You need a lot of feathers to make one kilogramme! Think of that! Both sides are the same.
Page 12
Then think of this drop of water. It is not a big thing. But drops and drops add up!
Page 13
The Boy gets his own mass! He grins and drops them both. Do you think both land with a thud?
Page 1 of 13
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Practice Words
Words containing the digraph 'th', producing either the unvoiced /ΞΈ/ or voiced /Γ°/ sound.
The Boy sat on the hill. He held up a stone and a feather. Then he will drop them both.
Then an elephant grips the smooth stone. The sun is hot, but the stone is not. It will not snap!
'This thing has mass!' says The Boy as he thrusts at the elephant. He thrusts and thrusts, but the elephant just sits still.
But the feather? The feather does not have a lot of mass. It is thin and soft in his hand.
The Boy thrusts the rock up with both hands. How much mass is in this rock? He must think and think.
This man has a set of scales!
Dad fills this flask with water, up to the top. 'This is one kilogramme!' he says. One flask, one kilogramme.
Dad says, 'Think of this. Ten cows or 200 dogs. Will the dogs win, or the cows?'
The world is so big. Can they get the mass of this big thing? The Boy must think and think.
A lot more flasks than this!
You need a lot of feathers to make one kilogramme! Think of that! Both sides are the same.
Then think of this drop of water. It is not a big thing. But drops and drops add up!
The Boy gets his own mass! He grins and drops them both. Do you think both land with a thud?