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  <title><![CDATA[The Cat in the Hat Beginner Book Dictionary (I Can Read It All by Myself Beginner Books)]]></title>
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    <![CDATA[A decades-old dictionary that you can still use today (and know that children will love it) is an amazing testament to the genius of the Seuss stable.  The roughly 12-per-page colored drawings are dated, of course--the humans far more than the animals, funnily enough--but they've aged in a way that adds to their charm rather than detracting from it. (<em>Phonograph</em> may take some explaining; ditto <em>typewriter</em>, which we recently heard described as &quot;like a computer, only with paper instead of a screen.&quot;) The 1,350 words are well balanced between the obvious stuff--common nouns and verbs--and more abstract language, from <em>about</em> to <em>yet</em>. Each word is accompanied by a drawing and an illustrative sentence.  Along the way, naturally, we meet a wacky menagerie of humans and animals: &quot;Aaron the alligator making more machines,&quot; &quot;Aunt Ada standing on her head,&quot; etc. (Ages 4 to 8) <em>--Richard Farr</em>]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[This book never gets old! 1500 stars. ]]></body>
    
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    <![CDATA[The Cat in the Hat Beginner Book Dictionary (I Can Read It All by Myself Beginner Books)]]>
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    <![CDATA[A decades-old dictionary that you can still use today (and know that children will love it) is an amazing testament to the genius of the Seuss stable.  The roughly 12-per-page colored drawings are dated, of course--the humans far more than the animals, funnily enough--but they've aged in a way that adds to their charm rather than detracting from it. (<em>Phonograph</em> may take some explaining; ditto <em>typewriter</em>, which we recently heard described as &quot;like a computer, only with paper instead of a screen.&quot;) The 1,350 words are well balanced between the obvious stuff--common nouns and verbs--and more abstract language, from <em>about</em> to <em>yet</em>. Each word is accompanied by a drawing and an illustrative sentence.  Along the way, naturally, we meet a wacky menagerie of humans and animals: &quot;Aaron the alligator making more machines,&quot; &quot;Aunt Ada standing on her head,&quot; etc. (Ages 4 to 8) <em>--Richard Farr</em>]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[I have an old edition of this from childhood, and my 2-year-old now loves it. She likes to read a couple of sections before naptime and bedtime, and enjoys picking out different letters each time. I like the way it is designed with lots of basic early reader words and simple illustrations on each pa...<a href="http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/27498310">more...</a>]]></body>
    
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    <![CDATA[A decades-old dictionary that you can still use today (and know that children will love it) is an amazing testament to the genius of the Seuss stable.  The roughly 12-per-page colored drawings are dated, of course--the humans far more than the animals, funnily enough--but they've aged in a way that adds to their charm rather than detracting from it. (<em>Phonograph</em> may take some explaining; ditto <em>typewriter</em>, which we recently heard described as &quot;like a computer, only with paper instead of a screen.&quot;) The 1,350 words are well balanced between the obvious stuff--common nouns and verbs--and more abstract language, from <em>about</em> to <em>yet</em>. Each word is accompanied by a drawing and an illustrative sentence.  Along the way, naturally, we meet a wacky menagerie of humans and animals: &quot;Aaron the alligator making more machines,&quot; &quot;Aunt Ada standing on her head,&quot; etc. (Ages 4 to 8) <em>--Richard Farr</em>]]>
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    <![CDATA[A decades-old dictionary that you can still use today (and know that children will love it) is an amazing testament to the genius of the Seuss stable.  The roughly 12-per-page colored drawings are dated, of course--the humans far more than the animals, funnily enough--but they've aged in a way that adds to their charm rather than detracting from it. (<em>Phonograph</em> may take some explaining; ditto <em>typewriter</em>, which we recently heard described as &quot;like a computer, only with paper instead of a screen.&quot;) The 1,350 words are well balanced between the obvious stuff--common nouns and verbs--and more abstract language, from <em>about</em> to <em>yet</em>. Each word is accompanied by a drawing and an illustrative sentence.  Along the way, naturally, we meet a wacky menagerie of humans and animals: &quot;Aaron the alligator making more machines,&quot; &quot;Aunt Ada standing on her head,&quot; etc. (Ages 4 to 8) <em>--Richard Farr</em>]]>
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    <![CDATA[A decades-old dictionary that you can still use today (and know that children will love it) is an amazing testament to the genius of the Seuss stable.  The roughly 12-per-page colored drawings are dated, of course--the humans far more than the animals, funnily enough--but they've aged in a way that adds to their charm rather than detracting from it. (<em>Phonograph</em> may take some explaining; ditto <em>typewriter</em>, which we recently heard described as &quot;like a computer, only with paper instead of a screen.&quot;) The 1,350 words are well balanced between the obvious stuff--common nouns and verbs--and more abstract language, from <em>about</em> to <em>yet</em>. Each word is accompanied by a drawing and an illustrative sentence.  Along the way, naturally, we meet a wacky menagerie of humans and animals: &quot;Aaron the alligator making more machines,&quot; &quot;Aunt Ada standing on her head,&quot; etc. (Ages 4 to 8) <em>--Richard Farr</em>]]>
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    <![CDATA[A decades-old dictionary that you can still use today (and know that children will love it) is an amazing testament to the genius of the Seuss stable.  The roughly 12-per-page colored drawings are dated, of course--the humans far more than the animals, funnily enough--but they've aged in a way that adds to their charm rather than detracting from it. (<em>Phonograph</em> may take some explaining; ditto <em>typewriter</em>, which we recently heard described as &quot;like a computer, only with paper instead of a screen.&quot;) The 1,350 words are well balanced between the obvious stuff--common nouns and verbs--and more abstract language, from <em>about</em> to <em>yet</em>. Each word is accompanied by a drawing and an illustrative sentence.  Along the way, naturally, we meet a wacky menagerie of humans and animals: &quot;Aaron the alligator making more machines,&quot; &quot;Aunt Ada standing on her head,&quot; etc. (Ages 4 to 8) <em>--Richard Farr</em>]]>
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    <![CDATA[A decades-old dictionary that you can still use today (and know that children will love it) is an amazing testament to the genius of the Seuss stable.  The roughly 12-per-page colored drawings are dated, of course--the humans far more than the animals, funnily enough--but they've aged in a way that adds to their charm rather than detracting from it. (<em>Phonograph</em> may take some explaining; ditto <em>typewriter</em>, which we recently heard described as &quot;like a computer, only with paper instead of a screen.&quot;) The 1,350 words are well balanced between the obvious stuff--common nouns and verbs--and more abstract language, from <em>about</em> to <em>yet</em>. Each word is accompanied by a drawing and an illustrative sentence.  Along the way, naturally, we meet a wacky menagerie of humans and animals: &quot;Aaron the alligator making more machines,&quot; &quot;Aunt Ada standing on her head,&quot; etc. (Ages 4 to 8) <em>--Richard Farr</em>]]>
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