DUE MONDAY, August 12
·
Blog
Post #4
·
Final
Draft of p.60, #1, typed and printed by 4:00pm
·
Read
and Annotate p.72-86
·
Complete
#3, p.85
DUE TUESDAY, August 13
·
Read
and annotate “Sister Flowers” p. 87
·
Answer
ALL Questions for Close Reading, p. 92,
·
Answer
Questions About the Writer’s Craft, p.
93 #2, 4
DUE WEDNESDAY, August
14
·
Read
and annotate “Flavio’s Home” p. 95
·
Answer
ALL Questions for Close Reading p. 101
·
Complete
writing assignment #1 OR #2 (your choice) on page 102, handwritten
·
Read
and annotate “Bloggers Without Borders” p. 111
·
Answer
ALL Questions for Close Reading, p. 114
DUE THURSDAY, AUGUST
15
·
Read
and annotate “A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood” p. 117
·
Answer
ALL Questions for Close Reading, p. 12
DUE FRIDAY, AUGUST 16
·
Write
a descriptive essay, chose a topic from p. 124, 1-20, handwritten
·
Study
for vocabulary quiz
DUE MONDAY, AUGUST 19
·
Final
draft of the descriptive essay, typed and printed- Due at 4:00pm
·
Blog
post #4
VOCABULARY LIST FOR QUIZ ON FRIDAY, AUGUST 16
DON’T FORGET- The quiz may contain questions over vocabulary
learned from previous weeks.
CHIASMUS - Repetition of ideas in inverted order. Sometimes called reverse parallelism. Example: "I had a teacher I liked who used to say good
fiction's job was to comfort the
disturbed and disturb the comfortable." (David Foster Wallace)
PARALLELISM- Also referred to as parallel
construction or parallel structure, this term comes from Greek roots meaning
“beside one another.” It refers to the grammatical or rhetorical framing of
words, phrases, sentences, or paragraphs to give structural similarity. This
can involve, but is not limited to, repetition of a grammatical element such as
a preposition or verbal phrase. Example:
“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom,
it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of believe, it was the epoch of
incredulity....” (Charles Dickens)
ZEUGMA -
When a word is used with two adjacent words in the same construction, but only
makes literal sense with one of them. Example:
"He carried a strobe light and the responsibility for the lives of his
men." (Tim O'Brien)
CLICHE:
A trite expression--often a figure of speech whose effectiveness has been worn
out through overuse and excessive familiarity. Example: “What goes around comes around”
SARCASM: is defined in The
Oxford Universal Dictionary, published in 1933, as "a sharp, bitter,
or cutting expression or remark; a bitter gibe or taunt." More
contemporary definitions often emphasize the false, mocking praise and verbal
irony of sarcasm rather than its malicious or scornful intent. Example: I refuse to engage in an intellectual battle with an unarmed man.
EUPHEMISM:
A word or words that are used to avoid employing an unpleasant or offensive
term. Example: “My grandpa
unexpectedly passed away yesterday” (use of “passed away” instead of “died”)
MALAPROPISM: the unintentional use of a word that resembles the
word intended but that has a very different meaning. Example: “He’s a wolf in cheap clothing” (using “cheap” instead of
“sheep”).
PERSONIFICATION: The figurative device in which inanimate objects or
concepts are given human qualities. Example:
“The flowers were crying for my attention.”
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