Description
We've got pizza rats and bodega cats. We'll grab a slice or some bagel and schmear, but don't even think about calling a "taxi." Fuhgeddaboudit! A true New Yorker knows it's a "cab"! Yerrr! Introducing 100 First Words for Little New Yorkers, a state primer for kids learning their first words! Forget apple and dog. Little New Yorkers are ready to move from ABC to MTA and other New York-specific words like borough, hero, and egg cream (if you know, you know). Packed with hilarious illustrations and 100 words every NYC-dwelling baby should know (before any others, of course), 100 First Words for Little New Yorkers is the perfect board book for families who call the City home.
Author: Ashley McPhee
Binding Type: Board Book
Publisher: Familius
Published: 06/07/2022
Series: 100 First Words
Pages: 20
Weight: 0.65lbs
Size: 3.40h x 6.30w x 1.10d
ISBN: 9781641705684
Audience: Baby-Preschool
About the Author
McPhee, Ashley: - Ashley McPhee, a former children's book editor, is a full-time writer and graduate student. She lives in New York City with her husband, a labradoodle, and two adventure cats.Gray, Patrick: - Patrick Gray is an illustrator based out of Montreal, Canada, who studied at the Ontario College of Art & Design. His lifelong challenges are to make art that's just as complicated as it needs to be and to know precisely when to stop working on a drawing: skills that (not-at-all maddeningly) his one-year-old daughter has already mastered.
Author: Ashley McPhee
Binding Type: Board Book
Publisher: Familius
Published: 06/07/2022
Series: 100 First Words
Pages: 20
Weight: 0.65lbs
Size: 3.40h x 6.30w x 1.10d
ISBN: 9781641705684
Audience: Baby-Preschool
About the Author
McPhee, Ashley: - Ashley McPhee, a former children's book editor, is a full-time writer and graduate student. She lives in New York City with her husband, a labradoodle, and two adventure cats.Gray, Patrick: - Patrick Gray is an illustrator based out of Montreal, Canada, who studied at the Ontario College of Art & Design. His lifelong challenges are to make art that's just as complicated as it needs to be and to know precisely when to stop working on a drawing: skills that (not-at-all maddeningly) his one-year-old daughter has already mastered.
Date Published
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