week 17
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Week 17. December 9-13. December 9 Clear Target. I will understand Clinton’s methods and begin to draft an argument on the main goal of his speech. December 9 Bellringer …. No bellringer ! Review your bellringers from last week to study We will take the quiz in 5 minutes - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
DECEMBER 9-13
Week 17
December 9 Clear Target
I will understand Clinton’s methods and begin to draft an argument on the main goal of
his speech.
December 9 Bellringer…No bellringer! Review your bellringers from last week to study
We will take the quiz in 5 minutes
Good luck! (from Tuna)
Tuna Tuesday!
December 10 BellringerMatch the following:
1) First person narrator
2) Second person narrator
3) Third person narrator
4) Limited third person narrator
5) Omniscient third person narrator
With the definition:a) When a voice outside
the story narrates b) Reveals only that one
character’s thoughtsc) When a character
inside the story narrates
d) Tells the reader what any character thinks or feels
e) Tells the reader what to do, usually directions
Point of View ReviewFirst person: When a character inside the
story narrates Second person: Tells the reader what to do,
usually directionsThird person objective: When a voice outside
the story narrates Third person limited: Reveals only that one
character’s thoughtsThird person omniscient: Tells the reader
what any character thinks or feels
Guess what day it is?!
December 11 BellringerMatch the term…
1) Plot2) Irony3) Dialogue4) Tone5) Symbolism
With its definition.a) How the author portrays
their feelings in writingb) Sequence of events in a
literary work c) When something
represents both itself and a larger idea or feeling
d) Conversation between or among characters
e) Something that happens in a story that contradicts the expectations of a character or reader
Literary Terms ReviewPlot: Sequence of events in a literary
work Irony: Something that happens in a story
that contradicts the expectations of a character or reader
Dialogue: Conversation between or among characters
Tone: How the author portrays their feelings in writing
Symbolism: When something represents both itself and a larger idea or feeling
December 12 BellringerMatch the term…
1) Parable2) Satire3) Allegory4) Parody5) Inference
With the definition.a) An imitation of a style
with exaggeration for comic effect
b) When the story is a symbol that stands for ideas about human life, etc
c) A simple story illustrating a moral or religious lesson
d) A logical assumption e) Use of humor or ridicule
to criticize people's stupidity
Literary Terms ReviewParable: A simple story illustrating a
moral or religious lesson Satire: Use of humor or ridicule to
criticize people's stupidity Allegory: When the story is a symbol
that stands for ideas about human life, etc
Inference: A logical assumption Parody: An imitation of a style with
exaggeration for comic effect
December 13 BellringerMatch the term
1) Repetition2) Slogans3) Parallelism4) Rhetorical
Questions
With the examplea) "I want her to live. I
want her to breathe. I want her to aerobicize.”
b) “If practice makes perfect, and no one's perfect, then why practice?”
c) “I’m lovin’ it”d) "When you are right
you cannot be too radical; when you are wrong, you cannot be too conservative."
Literary Terms Review
Repetition: An instance of using a word, phrase, or clause more than once in a short passageEx: "I want her to live. I want her to
breathe. I want her to aerobicize.”Slogans: A short, attention-getting
phrase or expression used in promoting a product, candidate, or causeEx: “I’m lovin’ it”
Literary Terms Review
Parallelism: Similarity of structure in a pair or series of related words, phrases, or clausesEx: "When you are right you cannot be too
radical; when you are wrong, you cannot be too conservative.”
Rhetorical Questions: A question you ask without the expectation of an answerEx: “If practice makes perfect, and no
one's perfect, then why practice?”