H5 - plurals and short stories

H5 - Plural forms
Car - Cars
House - Houses
Tomato - Tomatoes
Shelf - Shelves
Handkerchief - HandkerchieFs
Sheep - sheep
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Slide 1: Diapositive
Middelbare school

Cette leçon contient 24 diapositives, avec diapositives de texte et 1 vidéo.

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H5 - Plural forms
Car - Cars
House - Houses
Tomato - Tomatoes
Shelf - Shelves
Handkerchief - HandkerchieFs
Sheep - sheep

Slide 1 - Diapositive

Plurals
Blue booklet
ex. B/C - p. 25/26

Slide 2 - Diapositive

Nouns - plural forms - part I
  1. -S What is the common plural form?.
  2. When do nouns take "-ES" as their plural form? (Rule + exceptions)
  3. When do nouns take "-IES" as their plural form (Rule + exceptions)
  4. When do nouns take "-VES" as their plural form (Rule + exceptions)
  5. Which 3 other plural forms other than the above exist? > chairs/trees/dogs etc.

  1. -ES -> kisses/buses/watches/boxes etc.
  2. -ES -> tomatoes/potatoes/heroes etc. -> STUDY THE EXCEPTIONS (e.g. photos)
  3. -Y -> ie -> ladies/babies/cries etc. -> STUDY THE EXCEPTIONS (e.g. turkeys
  4. -F -> ves -> thieves/loaves/lives etc. -> STUDY THE EXCEPTIONS (e.g. handkerchiefs)
  5. -EN -> children/oxen / Change in vowel -> foot-feet, mouse-mice, louse-lice, goose-geese, woman-women etc. -> STUDY!!!!!/ Singular = Plural -> sheep/series/means/deer/Chinese (-ese) etc. -> STUDY!!!!





Slide 3 - Diapositive

Nouns - plural forms

    • Agreement Subject/noun (countable) -> Both men put out their cigarettes/ Women love cats (Women love coffee/Women love their cups of coffee in the morning.)

    • Plural noun as adjective takes singular form -> a twenty-pound note, a hundred-dollar bill

    • Crew/family/team/cattle/people/police -> plural form when referring to all members -> The police have arrested the thieves./Dutch people don't want to give up Sinterklaas.

    • People (volk)/Peoples (volkeren) -> the indigenous peoples of North Africa



    Slide 4 - Diapositive

    Slide 5 - Diapositive

    T

    Short stories

    Slide 6 - Diapositive

    Today's objective - second hour
    You will know about :
    Short story
    Setting
    Characters
    Incident

    Read Lamb to the Slaughter

    Slide 7 - Diapositive

    Slide 8 - Diapositive

    Short story

    A brief story (3-5 p. up to 12-20 p.)
    with a few characters, a simple plot, a conflict, 
    and suspense
    which leads to a climax & swift conclusion
    Can be read in one sitting

    Slide 9 - Diapositive

    Short story

    Four elements of a short story:

    1. Plot 
    2. Setting
    3. Characters
    4. Theme

    Slide 10 - Diapositive

    Plot
    1. introduction (setting/characters/narrative hook = question/statement that grabs the reader's attention)
    2. inciting incident (an action that sets the story in motion)
    3. rising action
    4. climax (pivotal moment; highest point of emotion)
    5. falling action
    6. resolution

    Slide 11 - Diapositive

    Narrative hook


    A question or statement that grabs the reader's attention 
    (in plot's introduction)

    Slide 12 - Diapositive

    Inciting incident


    An ACTION (what someone does/says) 
    that gets the ball rolling,
    sets the story in motion

    Slide 13 - Diapositive

    Setting
    1. The time (day/season/present/future)
    2. The location (country/planet/town/buildings/surroundings)


    -> creates mood (author's attitude towards subject matter)
    -> creates atmosphere (feeling that setting evokes, e.g. eerie)

    Slide 14 - Diapositive

    Characters
    Work in pairs to answer the following:

    1. What types of characters are there in a short story?
    2. What are their roles in the plot?
    3. How does the reader find out about the character traits (physical/personality)?
    timer
    5:00

    Slide 15 - Diapositive

    Characters

    • Protagonist - "good guy", main character that solves conflict
    • Antagonist - "bad buy", creates conflict for the main character
    • Secondary characters - move the plot along, may not be involved in conflict

    Slide 16 - Diapositive

    Character traits
    1. What the character him/herself does & says 
    2. What the other characters say or do about the character
    3. What the author states directly?
    4. Whatthe author implies (suggests/not explicitly written)

    Slide 17 - Diapositive

    Roald Dahl


    Short stories with a narrative twist (surprise ending)

    Slide 18 - Diapositive

    Slide 19 - Vidéo

    Answer the questions

    Groups of 4

    Slide 20 - Diapositive

    Lamb to the Slaughter (=HW)
    Answer in pairs. Use the short story in your booklet:

    1. What part of the story did we listen to?
    2. What can you say about the setting (time/location)?
    3. What is the atmosphere (how do you feel)?
    4. Describe the personalities of Mr. and Mrs. Maloney.
    5. What is the inciting incident - what happens that sets off the story?
    6. Who is the protagonist and who is the antagonist? Explain

    timer
    20:00

    Slide 21 - Diapositive

    Homework
    • Review questions
    • Review literary devices: 
    plot/setting/atmosphere/characters 
    • Reread story

    Slide 22 - Diapositive

    Finish reading & answer = HW 
    1. What is the first conflict in Lamb to the Slaughter?
    2. How does Mary solve this?
    3. What is the climax of Lamb to the Slaughter?
    4. What is the second conflict in Lamb to the Slaugher?
    5. How does Mary solve this?
    6. What are Mary's internal conflicts?
    7. What are Mary's external conflicts (2)?
    8. What is the narrative twist at the end of the story?

    timer
    30:00

    Slide 23 - Diapositive

    Next class (Friday Nov. 29th)


    • Conflict
    • Narrative twist
    • Rising/Falling action
    • Theme

    Slide 24 - Diapositive