Mother’s Day

Mother’s Day

Happy Mother’s Day to you, happy Mother’s Day to you!!

  • Mother’s Day is a special day for honouring mothers, and for families to celebrate their mothers.
  • Mother’s Day is normally celebrated in March or May, but is celebrated at different times in the year by different countries.
  • Mother’s Day was started in 1908 by Anna Jarvis, an American, who later regretted starting the celebration due to the commercialisation of the day.
  • Traditionally Mother’s Day is spelt with an apostrophe ‘s’, since Anna Jarvis thought the tradition should celebrate families’ mothers not mothers in general, although sometimes it is spelt ‘Mothers’ Day’ and ‘Mothers Day’.
  • Mother’s Day is most commonly celebrated on the second Sunday of May.

Mother's Day, Grandma, Mum, Mother, daughter, ladies, girl, formal, Ten Random Facts, Happy

  • The Roman Catholic Church has created a significant link between Mother’s Day and Virgin Mary, by honoring and remembering Mary on the day.
  • Mother’s Day is often celebrated by giving a gift, and cooking dinner or breakfast for one’s mother, or taking one’s mother out for a meal.
  • After the ninth year of the official United States Mother’s Day, Anna Jarvis thought Mother’s day was being disrespected and was not what she had in mind, so she protested against the day, and was arrested.
  • Mothering Sunday, a European Christian holiday, is not the same as Mother’s Day, although it is often celebrated on the same day.
  • Anna Jarvis lobbied for Mother’s Day to become a United States holiday, and succeeded in 1914.
Bibliography:
Mother’s Day, 2012, Sunnie Bunniezz, <http://sunniebunniezz.com/holiday/motherdy.htm>
Mother’s Day, 2013, Wikipedia, <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mother’s_Day>

Julie Andrews

Julie Andrews

She is a legend.

  • Julie Andrews’ full name is Dame Julie Elizabeth Andrews.
  • Julie Andrews is an actress, singer, director, dancer and author.
  • Julie Andrews was born on the 1 October, 1935, in Surrey, England.
  • Julie Andrews was named a dame, by Queen Elizabeth II, in 2000, for services to the performing arts.
  • Julie Andrews’ voice was damaged in 1997 due to a throat operation, and she never regained her incredible four octave singing voice, and as a result, she has participated in very few singing performances ever since.

 

Julie Andrews, autograph, bLACK and White, Grayscale, Young, Old, Print, Flickr, Ten Random Facts

 

Julie Andrews
Image courtesy of A Currell/Flickr

 

  • Julie Andrews married Tony Walton, and later Blake Edwards, and had five children, two of them orphans adopted from Vietnam, and two of them step children from Edwards’ previous marriage.
  • Julie Andrews started performing on stage with her parents in 1945, and within two years she was singing solo.
  • Julie Andrews is best known for her work as an actress in the musical Disney film ‘Mary Poppins’ (1964), portraying the main character, Mary Poppins; and as Maria von Trapp, in the 20th Century Fox film, the ‘Sound of Music’ (1965).
  • Julie Andrews has won over 25 awards, and been nominated for many, including 16 for Best Actress.
  • Julie Andrews has written many children’s books, some of which have become  New York Times bestsellers.
Bibliography:
Julie Andrews, 2013, Wikipedia, <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julie_Andrews>

C.S. Lewis

C.S. Lewis

Read any of his works?

  • The full name of C.S. Lewis is Clive Staples Lewis.
  • C.S. Lewis was born on the 29 November 1898 in Belfast, Ireland and died on the 22 November 1963 at Oxford, England.
  • C.S. Lewis’ main writings were Christian apologetics (defending the Christian faith), and fantasy and children’s fictional literature.
  • C.S. Lewis was known as ‘Jack’ to his friends and family, after the loved “Jacksie”, a neighbourhood dog, which died when Lewis was four years old.
  • C.S. Lewis became an atheist when he was 15, and became a strong Christian at age 32, influenced by his close friend J.R.R. Tolkien and the writings of G. K. Chesterton.
C.S. Lewis, Author, Famous, Auther, Narnia, Balck and White, Photobucket, Man, Ten Random FactsCharles Dicken
Image courtesy of Photobucket
  • C.S. Lewis was a tutor at the Oxford University from 1925 to 1954.
  • C.S. Lewis married the American writer, Joy Davidman, in 1956, who died four years later.
  • C.S. Lewis shared ideas with J.R.R. Tolkien, and was part of a group called the Inklings, who discussed literature.
  • C.S. Lewis has written at least thirty books, and some have been translated into 30 languages and millions of copies have been sold.
  • C.S. Lewis is best known for his “Chronicles of Narnia” series, a set of fantasy books written for children.
Bibliography:
About C.S. Lewis, 2008 Harper One, <http://www.cslewis.com/about.aspx>

Razor

Razor

Many men and women use razors.

  • Razors are used to cut body hair by shaving.
  • Razors have been used since the Bronze age and were originally made from bronze or obsidian.
  • There are three main types of razors; electric razors, straight razors and safety razors.
  • Straight razors started being produced in the 1700s and were mainly used by skilled barbers or servants to shave those who were wealthy.
  • The first modern straight razor was decorated and had a hollow ground blade.

Razor, Black, Blue, Old, Dirty, Ten Random Facts,

  • Sharpened clam shells, shark teeth and flint have all historically been used as razors.
  • Electrical razors, known as electric shavers, were first produced in the 1930s.
  • Stainless steel blades have been used in razors since 1960, which makes the razor reusable.
  • Razors are often hard to sharpen, so today’s razors mostly have blades, that when blunt, are disposed of.
  • Safety razors were invented in the late 1800s, and have become the most common type of razor.
Bibliography:
Razor, 2013 Wikipedia, <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Razor>

James Morrison (Musician)

James Morrison (Musician)

Aussie jazzer.

  • James Morrison is a jazz musician that plays multiple instruments, most notably the trumpet.
  • James Morrison was born on the 11 November 1962.
  • James Morrison was born in Boorowa, New South Wales, Australia.
  • James Morrison has been seen playing a clarinet, trombone, flugelhorn, bass trumpet, tuba, double bass, euphonium, piano, saxophone and trumpet.
  • James Morrison was chosen as artistic director of the Queensland Music Festival in 2012, for 2013 and 2015.

James Morrison, Trumpet, Playing, Muscian, Blow, Concert, Nicrophone, Queensland, Jazzer, Australia, Ten Random Facts 2013

  • James Morrison’s father is a church minister, his older brother is a jazz drummer, his sister is a trumpeter, and his mother is a pianist and alto saxophone player.
  • James Morrison has designed his own instruments, most notably a trumpet called ‘The Raven’ which has rotary valves.
  • James Morrison built his own recording studio in Sydney.
  • James Morrison once played the wrong Spanish anthem at the Davis Cup in Australia.
  • James Morrison has presented the jazz music on Qantas Airlines inflight radio, and has presented the television show, Top Gear Australia.
Bibliography:
James Morrison, 2013 Wikipedia, <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Morrison_(musician)>

Milk

Milk

Drink that lovely, creamy milk.

  • Milk is a white coloured liquid that is produced by mammals that have mammary glands.
  • Milk is the main nutritional source for baby mammals.
  • Mammals initially produce colostrum, a form of milk that contains some of the mother’s antibodies to help prevent illness and gives newborns an important boost of nutrients.
  • In  2011, the world wide production of milk from dairy farms was approximately 730 million tonnes (850 million tons).
  • India is the largest producer and consumer of milk, but the country doesn’t export or import it, while Australia and the United States are some of the biggest exporters of milk, and China and Russia are the biggest importers.

Milk, White, Homebrand, Glass, Clear, Brand New, Shops, Australia, Ten Random Facts

  • More than 6 billion people in the world consume milk or dairy products.
  • Humans often drink cattle, goat or sheep milk, and sometimes buffalo, camel, donkey, horse, reindeer, yak, moose and dolphin milk.
  • Milk can be made into cream, butter, yoghurt, kefir, ice-cream and cheese.
  • Cow’s milk is very high in calcium and a 250ml cup of full fat milk contains approximately 36% of an adult’s recommended daily dose of calcium.
  • Proteins in cow’s milk can cause allergic reactions in some humans, and a significant portion of the population have difficulty digesting lactose  (a type of sugar), which is called lactose intolerance.
Bibliography:
Milk 24 March 2013, Wikipedia, <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milk>
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