unit 4 – money lesson 5 four dollars and fifty cents day 2
TRANSCRIPT
Unit 4 – Money
Lesson 5 Four Dollars and Fifty Cents Day 2
What We Will Review
Compound words are made up of two words that help us understand the meaning
The suffixes –ed and –ing -s and –es plurals
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Word Knowledge
Identify the compound words and words with suffixes –ed or –ing.
“I’m driving out to the Circle K this afternoon.” As soon as Oscar left, Widow Macrae hitched
her two horses, Clementine and Evangeline, to the buckboard and drove out to the Circle K ranch. ↓
Word Knowledge
Identify the compound words and words with suffixes –ed or –ing.
One lit a lantern while the other two lugged an iron strongbox over to the open grave.
Word Knowledge
Identify the plural words and their endings.
Cowboys used to wear leather britches when riding on their horses.
Old West Vocabulary
skillet – frying pan rein in – to stop your horse
mosey – to walk slowly greenbacks – paper money rolling pin – used to roll out dough
Old West Vocabulary
buckboard – an open horse-drawn carriage; has a seat attached to a flexible board between the two axles.
Vocabulary
blacksmith – a person who makes objects from iron, which is heated and then hammered to the desired shape
part of speech – noun
Vocabulary
collecting – getting payment for a debt part of speech - verb
Vocabulary
decent – proper; respectable; acceptable to the community
part of speech – adjective synonym – acceptable, respectable antonym - indecent
Vocabulary
volunteered – offered to do part of speech – verb synonym – offered antonym – worked
for pay
Vocabulary
determined – firm and unwilling to change; stubbornly continuing as planned
part of speech – adjective synonym - stubborn
Comprehension Skill
Drawing Conclusions – A conclusion is the reader’s general idea about a story character or event that’s based on small pieces of information.
A conclusion should be supported in the text by statements, or by clues from which the reader can infer things that the author does not say directly. →
Choral Read Pages 58 and 59
What clues has the author given us about Shorty’s character?
He doesn’t pay his bills so he isn’t trustworthy.
What is one conclusion that we can draw about the way Shorty treats other people?
He thinks of himself first. →
Choral Read Pages 60 and 61
What have we learned about Widow Macrae on these two pages?
She looks at Shorty’s “dead body” a second time.
She is suspicious, but she doesn’t tell anyone.
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Drawing Conclusions
What conclusion can we draw about the Widow Macrae?
She is clever and won’t be outsmarted.
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Choral Read Pages 62 and 63
What else can we say about the Widow Macrae and Shorty?
Widow Macrae is not easily fooled, so she must know Shorty pretty well.
Shorty is not very smart. The easy thing to do would be to pay the
money back. ↓
Drawing Conclusions
He hasn’t thought what he would do if his trick worked either.
He would probably have to leave town.
Choral Read Pages 64 and 65
Author’s Point of View refers to the kind of narrator or speaker that the writer uses to tell the story.
In the first-person narrative, the writer tells the story as if the storyteller were a character in the story.
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Point of View
Name some of the clue words (pronouns) that are used with a first-person narrative.
I, me, we, us In the third-person narrative, the writer tells
the story as if the narrator or storyteller were someone outside of the story.
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Point of View
Name some of the clue words (pronouns) for a third-person narrative.
he, him, her, she, they, them, it
What is the author’s point of view for this story?→
Choral Read Pages 66 and 67
Let’s review Author’s Point of View. What is it?
It’s the kind of narrator or speaker the author uses to tell the story.
What clue words are there on these pages that let us know this story is a third-person narrative? →
Choral Read Pages 68 and 69
Author’s Point of View Third-person narrative
The narrator is describing the action as it happens to other people.
The narrator talks about other characters, but never himself.
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