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Books with title First Shape Book

  • First Shapes

    None

    Board book (Egmont Books Ltd, )
    None
  • Sooty's First Book of Shapes

    Sonia Canals

    Paperback (Kingfisher Books, June 2, 1997)
    None
  • First Cook Book

    Angela Wilkes

    Paperback (Usborne Publishing Ltd., Sept. 16, 1984)
    None
  • First Shapes

    Sue Hendra, Caroline Martin, Phil Babb

    Board book (Parragon Inc, June 1, 2010)
    Book by
  • First Shapes

    Lynn Huggins Cooper

    Paperback (Letts Educational, April 20, 2000)
    Designed for parents and carers of children of Pre-school age who are looking for a simple way to help their child with first shapes. Activity spreads are given with simple instructions for children to follow and parent's notes suggest follow-up activities with explanations and answers.
  • First Cook Book

    Jennifer Fellows

    Hardcover (Smithmark Publishing, )
    None
  • First Cook Book

    Angela Wilkes, Stephen Cartwright

    Paperback (Usborne Publishing Ltd., Sept. 18, 1987)
    None
  • My First Book

    Arthur Conan Doyle, And Others, Others And Others

    Paperback (University Press of the Pacific, July 19, 2003)
    The experiences of Walter Besant, James Payn, W. Clark Russell, Grant Allen, Hall Caine, George R. Sims, Rudyard Kipling, A. Conan Doyle, M. E. Braddon, F. W. Robinson, H. Rider Haggard, R. M. Ballantyne, I. Zangwill, Morley Roberts, David Christie Murray, Marie Corelli, Jerome K. Jerome, John Strange Winter, Bret Harte, 'Q', Robert Buchanan, Robert Louis Stevenson.
  • My First Book

    Jane Belt Moncure, Kathryn Hutton

    Hardcover (The Child's World, Aug. 16, 1990)
    Reading book
  • My First Book

    Jane Belk Moncure

    Library Binding (Childs World, Jan. 16, 1985)
    Each illustration is accompanied by a single word that identifies it.
  • My First Book

    Yasmeen Radaha

    Paperback (Independently published, Oct. 21, 2019)
    Why Do Babies Like Black and White Images?High-differentiating, high contrast pictures with sharp frameworks are a lot simpler for child to find in the initial couple of long periods of life while visual perception is as yet creating. During childbirth an infant's retina isn't completely built up; an infant retina can just identify EXTREME complexities among light and dim, or highly contrasting.
  • Shape Big Book: Big Book

    Karen Bryant-Mole

    Paperback (Evans Brothers Ltd, )
    None