12
By Rhiannonw
- 1048 reads
A clock with 12 numbers on it is called an Analogue clock.
12 hours from midnight until lunchtime, and
then 12 hours til midnight again .
We used to have money as
12 pennies to one shilling.
Eggs and other food is often
sold in cartons or bags of 12
– we say ‘by the dozen’
or half a dozen which is 6..
Jesus taught 12 special disciples
and then sent out 12 with the message
to all the world
of his rising from death
to be our Saviour.
11
11: the number of players in football
or cricket teams.
Canada’s flag has a red maple leaf,
with 11 points on it
(maple leaves aren’t all exactly like that!)
Apollo 11 was the first manned spacecraft
to land on the moon
People sometimes say that it is the 11th hour for doing something –
they mean it is urgent, thinking of the 12 hours shown on clocks.
WW1 ended at 11 o’clock in the morning
on the 11 day of the 11th month (November).
Rockets need to travel at just over 11 km per second
to escape the gravity of the earth
10
Two figures represent 10.
The crab that walks
sideways seems to have 10 legs
5 on each side, and so
belong to the Decapod group of animals
(deca is from the Greek language for 10)
but their front 2 ‘legs’ are really claws.
God gave us 10 big laws
to show us the meaning of love.
No,10 Downing Street in London
is where the Prime Minister has his home
above his offices
9
9 is the last of the ‘simple’ numbers!
We used to say that there were 9 planets
in our solar system,
but now, as he’s so small,
they don’t count Pluto
(say he’s just one of the little dwarf planets),
so that there are
only 8 in all
(take one off 9 leaves 8!)
We ring 9, then 9 again, and 9 once more
on a phone if there is a
serious emergency
to fetch Police, Ambulance or Fire Engine
with urgency.
3 blue smarties, 3 red,
and 3 yellow - makes 9!
8
8 legs on a spider
– 4 on each side
(4 and 4 makes 8);
8 tentacles on an octopus
(like arms)
An octagon is a flat shape
with 8 straight sides
‘octo’ comes from the Latin and Greek language words for 8.
October isn’t the 8th month of the year now,
but in the old Roman calendar
the year started in March,
and so it was.
7
7 days in every week –
the first day is Sunday,
then five school days,
followed by Saturday:
5 and 2 makes 7.
There are 7 colours in the rainbow:
red orange, yellow green blue indigo and violet;
7 white keys in the musical scale.:
C D E F G A B
or do, re, me fa, soh, lah, te.
6
6 sides (including top and bottom)
to cubes and bricks.
And every insect has 6
legs,
Collect 3 pegs and 3 pegs,
or 1 with 5,
or 4 with 2
to get 6 pegs in three different ways,
and the world was made in
6 creation days.
5
5 days for school –
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday,
and then Thursday, Friday;
5 fingers on each hand
(though one is called a thumb)
5 petals on a buttercup
3 sweets with another 2
makes 5 sweets altogether.
4
4 sides to a square,
4 wheels on a car,
4 legs on a chair:
2 books, and 2 more
makes 4.
3
3 leaflets on a clover leaf,
a tricycle has 3 wheels –
1, 2, 3
and every day there’s 3 main meals -
breakfast, lunch and dinner or tea.
2
2 hands to play
2 feet to take you on your way
2 eyes to watch
your feet don’t trip or slip or stray.
1
One mouth to guard,
one tongue to keep in check
as I talk;
one nose
that goes
in front
as I walk.
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Comments
You're still going strong
You're still going strong with nice words. Well done Rhiannon.
I might have gone for the twelve animals of the Chinese astrological years or the Twelve Pins (or Twelve Bens) of Connemara ... a range of mountains in the West of Ireland, one of which is in the photograph I posted with my poem It Being December yesterday.
I'm wondering now that you've got to twelve is your task complete or will you continue?
Turlough
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It must be a real challenge
It must be a real challenge each day Rhiannon to think of just the right things to aim at your age group - harder than you'd think!
autocorrect has given you the US spelling for analogue
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It's strange how big a thing
It's strange how big a thing six and twelve used to be. Seems far more sensible to do everything by the number of fingers, but I can (just) remember people complaining how difficult it was to understand "new money". Didn't 5 pence coins still say shilling on for ages? Very confusing if they were meant to be the same as six pence!!! What with that, and October not being the 8th month, a child would think Maths had only just been invented :0)
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Hi Rhiannon
Hi Rhiannon
This is an interesting poem, and informative for children as a teaching aid.
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Yes, please go on to 20,
Yes, please go on to 20, Rhiannon! These are great.
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