DUE TUESDAY, September 10
-Read & Annotate
p.233-238
-Photo writing Prompt
bottom of p.226
-Complete Pre-Reading
Journal, p.239
DUE THURSDAY, September 12
-Read “Propaganda
Techniques in Today’s Advertising” p.239
-Questions for Close
Reading ALL, p. 244
-Questions about
Writer’s Craft #1,3,4 p.244
DUE FRIDAY, September 13
- Read “The Ways We
Lie” p.247
-Christian
Integration, talk about lying
-Answer Questions for
Close Reading, #1-4 p.255
-Answer Questions
about Writer’s Craft, #1,3, p.255
-Essay, #5 p.256,
handwritten, double spaced
DUE MONDAY, September 16
-Final draft of the
essay #5, p.255, typed and printed- Due at 4:00pm Monday
-Blog post #9
VOCABULARY LIST- QUIZ ON FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13
INVECTIVE – an emotionally violent, verbal denunciation
or attack using strong, abusive language. (For example, in Henry IV, Part I,
Prince Hal calls the large character of Falstaff “this sanguine coward, this
bedpresser, this horseback breaker, this huge hill of flesh.”)
SYNESTHESIA – when one kind of sensory stimulus evokes the
subjective experience of another. Ex: The sight of red ants makes you itchy. In
literature, synesthesia refers to the practice of associating two or more
different senses in the same image.
Example: Red Hot Chili
Peppers’ song title,“Taste the Pain,” is an example.
HYPOPHORA – Figure of reasoning in which one or more
questions is/are asked and then answered, often at length, by one and the same
speaker; raising and responding to one’s own question(s). A common usage is to
ask the question at the beginning of a paragraph and then use the paragraph to
answer it. You can use hypophora to raise questions which you think the reader
obviously has on his/her mind and would like to see formulated and answered.
Example: “When the
enemy struck on that June day of 1950, what did America do? It did what it
always has done in all its times of peril. It appealed to the heroism of its
youth.” - Dwight D. Eisenhower
EPITHET is an adjective or adjective phrase
appropriately qualifying a subject (noun) by naming a key or important
characteristic of the subject, as in "laughing happiness,"
"sneering contempt," "untroubled sleep," "peaceful dawn,"
and "lifegiving water." Sometimes a metaphorical epithet will be good
to use, as in "lazy road," "tired landscape,"
"smirking billboards," "anxious apple." Aptness and
brilliant effectiveness are the key considerations in choosing epithets. Be
fresh, seek striking images, pay attention to connotative value.
Example: At length I
heard a ragged noise and mirth of thieves and murderers . . . . --George
Herbert
ALLITERATION: the
recurrence of initial consonant sounds. Example: Ah, what a delightfully delicious
day!
ENTHYMEME: an
informally-stated syllogism which omits either one of the premises or the
conclusion. The omitted part must be clearly understood by the reader. The
usual form of this logical shorthand omits the major premise:
Example, Since your
application was submitted before April 10th, it will be considered. [Omitted
premise: All applications submitted before April 10 will be considered.]
DIACOPE: repetition of a word or phrase after an
intervening word or phrase as a method of emphasis:
Example: We will do
it, I tell you; we will do it.
EPIZEUXIS: repetition of one word (for emphasis):
Example: The best way to describe this portion of South America is lush, lush,
lush.
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