This lesson contains 16 slides, with interactive quiz, text slides and 4 videos.
Items in this lesson
Welcome to Mrs Everstijn's (online) classroom
Slide 1 - Slide
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Slide 2 - Video
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Battle of the Languages
Slide 3 - Slide
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Learning objectives:
- Students can analyse a text. - Students can identify Old English & Old French loanwords. - Students can identify Old English & Old French affixes. - Students can explain two forms of increasing vocabulary.
Remember; Old English for unfinished/live products and home and family affairs = used by lower classes
Old French/Norman French words were used to describe finished products (beef is cooked cow), governing, law, education and other interests of the upper class.
Played live in groups = facemasks on and form groups.
Played live individually = stay seated
Played as a class = memory version or flashcards in learn mode.
Affixes
'Old English vs Old French'
prefixes
Old English:
be- = about, around, on all sides fore- = prior to mis- = broken/not correct over-= too much off un- =not
Old French:
arch- = chief, principal
co- = opposite, against
dis- = lack of/not, opposite
in- = not, opposite of, without
il-/ir- = not, opposite of, without
con- = together, with
trans- = across, beyond
pre- = before
Slide 10 - Slide
Affixes are also a way to enter new words into a language. We focus on prefixes (in front of a root) and suffixes (after the root) for both Old English and Old French. These affixes are still very common in Modern English as you will find out when you analyse a contemporary text.
Affixes
'Old English vs Old French'
suffixes
Old English:
-ed = used for past simple & past participle weak verbs
-en = making verbs from adjectives/nouns
-er = native words for a person's characteristics/skills
-ful = filled with
-ish = acting like
-less = without
-ly = like
-ness = used to produce nouns
Old French:
-able = adding a notion of someting, used to form adjectives
-acy =making nouns of quality, state, condition
-ate = form nouns
-ance = form abstract nouns of process or fact
-tion = word-forming element
-ment = make nouns indicating the result or product
Slide 11 - Slide
Affixes are also a way to enter new words into a language. We focus on prefixes (in front of a root) and suffixes (after the root) for both Old English and Old French. These affixes are still very common in Modern English as you will find out when you analyse a contemporary text.
Who:
What:
How:
Help:
Time:
Result:
Done:
individual
Exercises 14 (p149), 26 (p156)
Antwoorden in werkboek (bij herhaling op apart blaadje)
CB helpdesk page 147 + formule (ww + ing)
5 min
Zelf nakijken(KEYS in SOM vanaf donderdag)
Analyseer hoe goed je deze oefeningen gemaakt hebt.
Slide 12 - Slide
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Affixes
'Old English vs Old French'
individual
Handout text New York Times October 13th, 2020
Mark/underline in different colours the Old English & Old French affixes
Affixes list
5 min
Class discussion
Keep calm & wait or help a class mate.
Who:
What:
How:
Help:
Time:
Result:
Done:
Slide 13 - Slide
Teacher hands out NYT text + affixes list
Battle of the Languages
'Old English vs Old French':
Slide 14 - Slide
Read poem 'William the Conqueror Sends a Postcard Home' by John Coldwell.
Is introduction to writing assignment which includes changing perspective.
Which language, do you think, won? Support your answers with examples.
Slide 15 - Open question
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Slide 16 - Video
Cut short after 1-2 minutes, just to get the gist.
Not accurate Middle English but fun why to attract attention.