11 03-11 e8
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English 8November 2, 2011
Do Now
Complete Wednesday’s DLR. When you are finished, give your paper to your shoulder buddy to correct.
Your DLR is due on Friday. It must be corrected and graded by your buddy.
Your name and your buddy’s name must be on it, in order to receive credit.
GUM
Cornell Notes:
Left Side: What is a participle? What is a participial phrase?
Participles and Participial Phrases are examples of verbals. A verbal is a verb that DOES not act like a verb in a sentence. It is, instead, another part of speech.
Present Participles end in –ing
Past Participles end in -ed
Participles/Participial Phrases
Cornell Notes:
Left Side: Examples of present participle:
Right Side: traveling, talking, eating
Left Side: Examples of past participles:
Right Side: identified, possessed, haunted
Left Side: What is a participial phrase?
Right Side: A participial phrase is comprised of a participle and other words that complete its meaning. A participial phrase can act as an adj.
Homework tonight: GUM 8 Parts 1, 2, 3
Edgar Allan Poe“The Tell-Tale Heart,” 1843
American Romantic poets and writers of this period were:
DRAMATIC! OBSESSED! EMOTIONAL!
The story of man, an eye and a heart . . . Thump. Thump.
Vocabulary from “The Tell-Tale Heart”
Remember, you are responsible for creating flash cards for all vocabulary words.
You are also responsible for creating a vocabulary window for the following words, which you should highlight or circle on your vocabulary handout.
Profound, sagacity, stifled, audacity, mockery
Literary Elements
Cornell Notes:
Left Side: What literary elements does Edgar Allan Poe utilize in “The Tell-Tale Heart” story?
Left Side: What is imagery?
Right Side: Imagery is language that appeals to the senses (sight, sound, taste, touch, smell). Example: “the hinges creaked”.
More Literary Elementsthat Edgar Allan Poe Utilizes
Cornell Notes:
Left Side: What is figurative language?
Right Side: Whenever you describe something by comparing it with something else, you are using figurative language. The most common figures of speech are simile, metaphor, and alliteration.
Figurative Language Defined
Cornell Notes:
Left Side: What is a simile?
Right Side: A simile is a comparison of two unlike things, typically, marked by use of “like” or “as”. For example: “much such a sound as a watch makes when enveloped in cotton”.
Figurative Language Defined
Cornell Notes:
Left Side: What is a metaphor?
Right Side: A metaphor is a comparison of two unlike things using the verb “to be” and not using “like” or “as”, like a simile does. Example: “He is a pig”.
Literary Terms Defined
Cornell Notes:
Left Side: What is alliteration?
Right Side: Alliteration is repeated consonant sounds occurring at the beginning of words or within words. Alliteration is used to create melody, establish mood, call attention to important words, and point out similarities and contrasts. Example: “hideous heart”.
Literary Elements Continued
Cornell Notes:
Left Side: What is repetition?
Right Side: Repetition is when words or certain phrases are repeated for a stronger emphasis by the author. Example: “louder, louder”.
Literary Elements Continued
Cornell Notes:
Left Side: What is grim humor?
Right Side: Grim humor is humor that involves topics and events that are usually treated seriously—death, mass murder, sickness, madness, terror, war—that are instead treated as humorous. Another word for this is satire. Example: “I was never kinder to the old man than during the whole week before I killed him.”
Literary Elements Continued
Cornell Notes:
Left Side: What are supernatural and horror subjects?
Right Side: Supernatural and horror subjects are intended to scare, unsettle or horrify the audience. Historically, the cause of the “horror” experience has been the intrusion of an evil or misunderstood supernatural element into everyday human experience. Example: “Death, in approaching him, had stalked with his black shadow . . .”.
Writing AssignmentIn a minimum of 200 words, tell
somebody off ! Don’t say who. Just give the person a piece of your mind, in writing, in a letter you will never send. Express yourself with strong, but not foul language. VENT! VENT! VENT!
Use at least 5 different literary elements to get your point across to this person, who has infuriated you.
Imagery, Simile
Metaphor, Alliteration, Repetition
(Grim Humor, Horror and Supernatural)
Our guidelines for scholarly behavior and respect
1. Respect your classmates in your words and actions.
2. Listen when somebody else is talking.
3. Class time is for class activities.
4. Come to class prepared.
5. Follow the teacher’s directions.
6. Sit in your seat as a scholar sits in his/her seat.
7. Use your 2” voice, which is a whisper.