Lisa
A 'P6 spelling book' - what is that? There is a poem by Sinéad Morrissey that starts like this: A soldier returned from a war was how my P6 spelling book put it: I saw cripples with tin cans for coins in dusty scarlet, back from some spat of Empire. Does it mean some textbook at school? For the 6th year of the primary school perhaps? But is yes, why is that a 'spelling book' - sounds more like history... Do they maybe put historical pictures/photographs into spelling textbooks? Any help really appreciated.
Sep 18, 2014 12:40 PM
Answers · 4
You're right about the book, but wrong about the picture. P6 in this case is primary 6, for 10 year olds, approximately. 'xxx was how my P6 spelling book put it' refers to the definition of the word 'veteran'. How you 'put ' something is how you phrase it. The picture that she 'saw' is the image in her own mind, conjured up by the word 'veteran' and the definition of a soldier returning to the war.
September 18, 2014
Yes its her way of describing a dictionary.
September 18, 2014
Still haven’t found your answers?
Write down your questions and let the native speakers help you!