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DECEMBER 9-13 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 Presentation

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Page 1: Week 17

DECEMBER 9-13

Week 17

Page 2: 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.

Page 3: Week 17

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)

Page 4: Week 17

Tuna Tuesday!

Page 5: Week 17

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

Page 6: Week 17

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

Page 7: Week 17

Guess what day it is?!

Page 8: Week 17

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

Page 9: Week 17

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

Page 10: Week 17

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

Page 11: Week 17

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

Page 12: Week 17

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."

Page 13: Week 17

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”

Page 14: Week 17

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?”