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  1. Dossiers: Animals in Australia, WhalesVainqueur du Language Learner Literaure Awards 2011 Cliquez ici pour regarder la vidéo de la cérémonie de remise des prix de l'Extensive Reading Foundation (de 12 min 05 à 14 min 05) Cliquez ici pour regarder l'interview du Series Editor , Robert Hill, qui parle des lectures graduées et lit un paragraphe de Just So Stories.

  2. Just So Stories. These are some of the stories Rudyard Kipling made up for his children. They are called ‘Just So’ because he told them again and again, and the children always wanted them to be told just the same. He drew the black and white pictures himself.

  3. Rudyard Kipling wondered about all these things too, and in this marvellous collection of stories he imagines how the animals became 'just so'.Includes exclusive material: In the Backstory you can find out why Just So Stories is one of Philip Pullman’s favourite books and discover wacky facts about wild animals!Vintage Children’s Classics is a twenty-first century classics list aimed at 8 ...

  4. Just So Stories. Rudyard Kipling. Everyman's Library, 1992 - Fiction - 218 pages. Kipling's own drawings, with their long, funny captions, illustrate his hilarious explanations of How the Camel Got His Hump, How the Rhinoceros Got His Skin, How the Armadillo Happened, and other animal How's. He began inventing these stories in his American wife ...

  5. 23 de may. de 2010 · The buttony-things are the Mariner's suspenders, and you can see the knife close by them. He is sitting on the raft, but it has tilted up sideways, so you don't see much of it. The whity thing by the Mariner's left hand is a piece of wood that he was trying to row the raft with when the Whale came along.

  6. About Just So Stories. The Camel gets his Hump, the Whale his Throat, and the Leopard his Spots in these bewitching stories that conjure up distant lands, the beautiful gardens of splendid palaces, and the jungle and its creatures. Inspired by Rudyard Kipling’s delight in human eccentricities and the animal world, and based on bedtime stories ...

  7. These witty stories were originally told by Rudyard Kipling to his own children. In them he gives fanciful accounts of how and why things came to be as they are. Generations of children have delighted to learn how the Leopard got his spots, how the Elephant's Child on the banks of the great grey-green Limpopo acquired his trunk with the help of the Crocodile, and the beginning of the Armadillos.