Positive Placements For Children Ltd.
Address
24 Ravenson DriveAshington
Northumberland
NE63 8XU
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Information about words in this company name or address
positive
1. explicitly stated, stipulated, or expressed: a positive acceptance of the agreement.
2. admitting of no question: positive proof.
3. stated; express; emphatic: a positive denial.
4. confident in opinion or assertion; fully assured: He is positive that he will win the contest.
5. overconfident or dogmatic: The less he knows, the more positive he gets.
6. without relation to or comparison with other things; not relative or comparative; absolute.
7. Informal.downright; out-and-out: She''s a positive genius.
8. determined by enactment or convention; arbitrarily laid down: positive law.
9. emphasizing what is laudable, hopeful, or to the good; constructive: a positive attitude toward the future; positive things to say about a painting.
10. not speculative or theoretical; practical: a positive approach to the problem.
11. possessing an actual force, being, existence, etc.
12. Philos.
a. constructive and sure, rather than skeptical.
b. concerned with or based on matters of experience: positive philosophy.
13. showing or expressing approval or agreement; favorable: a positive reaction to the speech.
14. consisting in or characterized by the presence or possession of distinguishing or marked qualities or features : Light is positive, darkness negative.
15. noting the presence of such qualities, as a term.
16. measured or proceeding in a direction assumed as beneficial, progressive, or auspicious: a positive upturn in the stock market.
children
This most interesting and rare surname is of Anglo-Saxon origin, and was probably a nickname given to someone who came from an orphanage, or may indeed have been an occupational name for a person who worked in an orphanage. The derivation is from the unrecorded Olde English pre 7th Century "cildra", Middle English "child", a child or infant, and "aern", building; hence children''s building, orphanage. This surname has the same formation and meaning as the English surname "Childerhouse" (Olde English "cildra-hus"). The surname itself is first recorded in the late 13th Century (see below), while one John atte Children is recorded in Kent, in 1267, in the Calendar of Patent Rolls. Peter ate Children is mentioned in the Assize Court Rolls of Kent in 1317, while other early recordings include Thomas Children, 1477, and Robert Achildren, 1560, listed in the "Index of Wills proved in the Rochester Consistory Court". Dorety Children married Symon Ponder in 1539 at St. Peter Cornhill, London, and Richard Children married Elizabeth Everest in Canterbury in 1661.
ashington
Ashington is a town and civil parish in Northumberland, England with a population of around 27,000 people; it was once a centre of the coal mining industry. The town is located some 15 miles north of Newcastle-upon-Tyne off the A189. The south of the town is bordered by the River Wansbeck. The North Sea coast at Newbiggin-by-the-Sea is about 3 miles from the town centre.
Many inhabitants have a distinctive accent and dialect known as Pitmatic. This varies from the regional dialect known as Geordie.
The name Ashington possibly originates from Essdene which has been referenced since 1170, but may instead have originated from Ęsc, a Saxon invader who sailed from Northern Germany to the River Wansbeck and settled in the deep wooded valley near Sheepwash. But it could also have come from "Valley of Ash Trees" - these would have lined the valley and the Saxon word Dene means valley giving the name ''Ash Dene''. In the 1700s all that existed of Ashington was a small farm with a few dwellings around.
Ashington is located in south east Northumberland, which is a largely urban area adjacent to Newcastle. Most of the area is of flat non-undulating ground, formed during Carboniferous period when ancient tropical swamp forests were buried and formed the coal seams that have given this area its significance. The local geology is of yellow sandstone. The topography of the town is quite flat. The land to the north west of the town is slightly undulating due to mining subsidence, which sometimes causes farmland to be flooded. The south east part of the town is slightly raised giving views to the north across Ashington. From certain parts of town the Cheviot Hills are visible about 30 miles to the north.

