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- Brigham Young’s 225th Birthday: Remembering When He Outwitted Mark Twain by Daniel C. Peterson
- Where the Ground Still Knows by Paul Bishop
- Magic in the Mundane and Monotonous Mondays by Patrick D. Degn
- Where Hope Meets Us in Our Pain by Paul Bishop
- Hastening Now: A Weekly Church Report by Meridian Church Newswire
- Who Knew? Men Have Rights, Too by United Families International
- The Constitution—Man-Made or Divinely Inspired? by Tad R. Callister
- What Loyalty Looks like—Come Follow Me, Podcast: Ruth, 1 Sam. 1-3 by Scot and Maurine Proctor
- Pack Your Bags, We’re Staying Home by Carolyn Nicolaysen
- Currents: Asking ChatGPT If It Has a Religious Bias by Meridian Magazine
















Comments | Return to Story
MelanieApril 23, 2014
This article seems helpful, however, I would like to add that the greatest gift that we can give our children is a love and a knowledge for God and His word.
KimMay 11, 2013
I can see examples every day with my kids. Like whether to go in trolley or walk at supermarket, or which clothe sor shoes to wear. My 2 and a half year old can pronounce that phrase, but where language is developing we could have kids try a very basic version or you could even help them, like saying 'seems like you would like to disagree with mummy'? They say 'yes'. Same as when you're teaching them other words/ sentence and figuring out what they want. I like it and will be using this advice, thanks for writing this article.
RApril 20, 2013
My 2 and a half year old can't pronounce the phrase, "May I disagree appropriately?"... this seems like great advice... for older children.
Amy_CarterApril 16, 2013
I would like to see some examples of this...
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