South Australian Spelling Test Templates

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Corrected on December 2, 2017 A previous version of this story referenced the set of Cecil B. DeMille's 1956 biblical film The Ten Commandments. The correct year is 1923. DeMillle directed a second, expanded version of the story in 1956. In addition, the story incorrectly suggested the 1923 film is among the highest-grossing when adjusted for inflation and that its budget was more than $13 million. Both of those are true for the 1956 version. Also, the story stated that the sphinx was made of plastic; it was plaster.

The South Australian Spelling Test (SAST) is a standardised test of spelling achievement for students in the age range 6 years to 15. Close inspection of the errors a student makes in the spelling test will also yield some diagnostic information. For example, it. She wrote her SIGNATURE 0n the paper. Fresh air is good to.

Corrected on December 1, 2017 After the broadcast of the panel discussion with Jane Mayer and Rebecca Traister, during which David Corn, the Washington bureau chief of Mother Jones, was included in a list of journalists alleged to have committed acts of sexual harassment or assault, Mother Jones Editor in Chief Clara Jeffrey and CEO Monika Bauerlein contacted us to say that although women had raised concerns in the past about Corn's language and uninvited touching, those allegations were investigated, addressed and resolved at the time. Corrected on October 16, 2017 In this round's Quick Game 3, the category was 'Name the nine U.S. Vice presidents who became president when their running mate died or resigned.' We listed Gerald Ford as a correct answer. Ford is one of nine vice presidents who became president when the president died or resigned. However, Ford was not Nixon's running mate; Spiro Agnew was, and was replaced by Ford after Agnew's resignation.

South Australian Spelling Test Templates

The clue should have said, 'Name the nine U.S. Vice presidents who became president when the president died or resigned.' This error did not affect the outcome of the game. Corrected on September 15, 2017 We heard back from a lot of listeners on this story. Many complained about the example we gave to portray the dangerous search terms used by some Facebook advertisers that use targeted ads.

Radiohead The Bends Zip Rar Password. The intent of the example was to illustrate how online advertisers searched extreme subgroups. We didn't mean to either offend anyone or perpetuate a stereotype; the specific example we used was provided by a leading online marketer that uses Facebook tools.

We should have made that clearer during the conversation. Corrected on August 23, 2017 A previous version of this story incorrectly stated that the AdhereTech 'smart' bottle glows red if a patient has missed a dose. As AdhereTech CEO Josh Stein tells NPR, the bottle does not do that. With respect to the distribution of AdhereTech's bottles, Stein says they are being widely distributed and marketed, mostly in the U.S., but also in countries on three other continents.

With respect to the cost of AdhereTech's bottles, AdhereTech sells them to pharmacies, hospitals and other health care providers, who also get access to real-time information about the bottles' usage. The costs vary depending on the services that customers purchase, Stein says. The bottles are not sold directly to consumers. Crack Lingua Italiana F1 2012 Gameplay. As to their cost, an analogy was earlier made to cellphone prices and service contracts.

The analogy was meant to refer to the structure of contracts, not to the actual prices of AdHere's products and services, which Stein says are far less than those for cellphones and related services. The data that Stein cites showing AdhereTech's bottles improved patients' adherence to their medication regimen by an average 24 percent are based, he says, on information from 'multiple thousands' of bottle users with different types of diseases or conditions, from different clients. In the audio version of this report, a large-scale evaluation of different bottle technology is cited. To be clear, that evaluation did not include tests of AdhereTech's bottles. Corrected on August 11, 2017 In the audio of this story, as well as an earlier Web version, we report that Susan Greenhalgh 'knew that in September, the FBI had warned Florida election officials that Russians had tried to hack one of their vendor's computers.' Greenhalgh's information was based on several news reports last fall and a discussion she had with one of the local election officials who participated in the call with the FBI.

A spokeswoman for the Florida Department of State, which manages elections in the state, says there was 'an informational call with the FBI. Where they alerted officials for the need to maintain security measures, but there was no indication of a Florida-specific issue.' Corrected on July 27, 2017 In this report, we say that a few days after Curtis Bordenave filed an application to register 'Nigga' as a trademark, Steve Maynard's Snowflake Enterprises LLC applied to do the same thing. In fact, Bordenave's first application to trademark the word was filed on June 19, 2017, the day of the Supreme Court decision.

Later that same day, Maynard's Snowflake Enterprises filed an application. Bordenave filed a second application to register 'Nigga' on June 19. Then on June 27, Maynard's Snowflake Enterprises filed two more applications to register the word.