Please have the following things on your desk: 1. Reading journals and books

36
Please have the following things on your desk: 1. Reading journals and books 2. A pen or pencil 3. Assignment pad Homework: Keep up with your reading and journals. Two new journals are due tomorrow. Agenda: Vocabulary strategies New vocabulary Intro to The Diary of Anne Frank

description

Please have the following things on your desk: 1. Reading journals and books 2. A pen or pencil 3. Assignment pad Homework : Keep up with your reading and journals. Two new journals are due tomorrow. Agenda: Vocabulary strategies New vocabulary - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Please have the following things on your desk: 1. Reading journals and books

Page 1: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Please have the following things on your desk:

1. Reading journals and books 2. A pen or pencil3. Assignment pad  Homework: Keep up with your reading and journals. Two new journals are due tomorrow.  Agenda: Vocabulary strategies New vocabulary Intro to The Diary of Anne Frank

Page 2: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

The Diary of Anne Frank

By Anne Frank Dramatized by

Frances Goodrich and

Albert Hackett

Page 3: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Do I see clues in the context of the sentence or passage?

Do I know any other words with the same root or affix?

Do I know the word in any other form?

Do I know this word or part of this word in another language?

Vocabulary Strategies

Page 4: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Malcontents Example from the text:

“Most Germans felt that they were being unfairly signaled out and blamed for a war which had multiple causes. . . The National Socialist German Worker’s Party , led by Adolf Hitler, grew as it attracted all sorts of malcontents.”

- “A Short History of Nazi Germany”

Page 5: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Look for clues in the context of the sentence or passage.

Do I know any other words with the same root or affix?

Do I know the word in any other form?

Do I know this word or part of this word in another language?

Vocabulary Strategies

Page 6: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Malcontents “Most Germans felt that they were being unfairly signaled out and blamed for a war which had multiple causes. . . The National Socialist German Worker’s Party , led by Adolf Hitler, grew as it attracted all sorts of malcontents.”

- “A Short History of Nazi Germany”

Page 7: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Appalled Example from the text:

Dussel: I think some day he’ll be caught and then he’ll make a bargain with the Green Police. . . If they let him off, he’ll tell them where some Jews are hiding. (He goes off into the bedroom. There is a second of appalled silence.)

Page 8: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Look for clues in the context of the sentence or passage.

Do I know any other words with the same root or affix?

Do I know the word in any other form?

Do I know this word or part of this word in another language?

Vocabulary Strategies

Page 9: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Appalled Example from the text:

Dussel: I think some day he’ll be caught and then he’ll make a bargain with the Green Police. . . If they let him off, he’ll tell them where some Jews are hiding. (He goes off into the bedroom. There is a second of appalled silence.)

Page 10: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Appalled

Example from the text:

(He goes off into the bedroom. There is a second of appalled silence.)

Part of speech: adjective

Definition: horrified; shocked

Page 11: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Conspicuous Example from the text:

(The yellow Star of David is conspicuous on all of their clothes.)

Page 12: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Conspicuous

Example from the text:

(The yellow Star of David is conspicuous on all of their clothes.)

Part of speech: adjective

Definition: easy to notice; obvious

Page 13: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Disgruntled Example from the text:

Mrs. Frank: Wake up, everyone! Miep is here! (Anne quickly puts her diary away Margot sits up, pulling the blanket around her shoulders. Mr. Dussel sits on the edge of his bed, listening, disgruntled.)

Page 14: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Disgruntled

Example from the text:

(Mr. Dussel sits on the edge of his bed, listening, disgruntled.)

Part of speech: adjective

Definition: displeased and irritated

Page 15: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Foreboding Example from the text:

Margot: (With sudden foreboding). What’s happened? Something’s happened! Hasn’t it, Mr. Kraler?

Page 16: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Foreboding

Example from the text:

Margot: (With sudden foreboding). What’s happened? Something’s happened! Hasn’t it, Mr. Kraler?

Part of speech: noun

Definition: a feeling that something, especially bad or harmful, is about to happen

Page 17: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Inarticulate Example from the text:

(Peter is furious, inarticulate. He starts toward Dussel as if to hit him.)

Page 18: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Inarticulate

Example from the text:

(Peter is furious, inarticulate. He starts toward Dussel as if to hit him.)

Part of speech: adjective

Definition: speechless; unable to speak effectively or understandably

Page 19: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Jubilation Example from the text: Mr. Frank: I’m afraid, Anne, we shouldn’t sing that song tonight. It’s a song of jubilation, of rejoicing. One is apt to become too enthusiastic.

Page 20: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Jubilation

Example from the text:

Mr. Frank: I’m afraid, Anne, we shouldn’t sing that song tonight. It’s a song of jubilation, of rejoicing. One is apt to become too enthusiastic.

Part of speech: noun

Definition: rejoicing; a celebration or expression of joy

Page 21: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

LoatheExample from the text: Anne: Mother is unbearable. She insists on treating me like a baby, which I loathe.

Page 22: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Loathe

Example from the text:

Anne: Mother is unbearable. She insists on treating me like a baby, which I loathe.

Part of speech: verb

Definition: to hate; to dislike someone or something greatly

Page 23: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

OppressionExample from the text: Mr. Frank: We light kindle this Hanukkah light to celebrate the great and wonderful deeds of the Maccabees…they fought against indifference, against tyranny and oppression.

Page 24: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Oppression

Example from the text:

Mr. Frank: We light kindle this Hanukkah light to celebrate the great and wonderful deeds of the Maccabees…they fought against indifference, against tyranny and oppression.

Part of speech: noun

Definition: the act of keeping someone down through harsh and unjust use of power; the feeling of being heavily weighed down (mentally or physically)

Page 25: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Ostentatiously Example from the text: (Peter is coming from his bedroom, ostentatiously holding a bulge in his coat as if her were holding his cat, and dangling Anne’s present before it).

Page 26: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Ostentatiously

Example from the text:

(Peter is coming from his bedroom, ostentatiously holding a bulge in his coat as if her were holding his cat, and dangling Anne’s present before it).

Part of speech: adverb

Definition: with great show or exaggeration

Page 27: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Pandemonium Example from the text: (Peter grabs a frying pan and parades around the room, beating on it. . .Anne and Margot follow him, singing, weaving in and out among the excited grownups. While this pandemonium is going on Mrs. Frank tries to make herself heard above the excitement.)

Page 28: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Pandemonium

Example from the text:

(Peter grabs a frying pan and parades around the room, beating on it. . .Anne and Margot follow him, singing, weaving in and out among the excited grownups. While this pandemonium is going on Mrs. Frank tries to make herself heard above the excitement.)

Part of speech: noun

Definition: wild confusion and noise; an uproar

Page 29: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Remorse Example from the text:

(They are startled to hear a loud sob from behind them. It is Mrs. Frank, stricken with remorse. She is sitting on the other side of the room.)

Page 30: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Remorse

Example from the text:

(They are startled to hear a loud sob from behind them. It is Mrs. Frank, stricken with remorse. She is sitting on the other side of the room.)

Part of speech: noun

Definition: a bitter regret or guilt after having done wrong

Page 31: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Vile Example from the text:

Anne: Isn’t algebra vile, Pim!

Mr. Frank: Vile!

Page 32: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Vile

Example from the text:

Anne: Isn’t algebra vile, Pim!

Mr. Frank: Vile!

Part of speech: adjective

Definition: disgusting; hateful; unpleasant

Page 33: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Wallow Example from the text:

Anne: Mr. Dussel wants to get back to his dentist’s drill…for myself, there are so many things…to ride a bike again…to laugh till my belly aches…to have a hot tub filled to overflowing and wallow in it for hours.

Page 34: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Wallow

Example from the text:

Anne: Mr. Dussel wants to get back to his dentist’s drill…for myself, there are so many things…to ride a bike again…to laugh till my belly aches…to have a hot tub filled to overflowing and wallow in it for hours.

Part of speech: verb

Definition: to indulge in or take great pleasure and delight in

Page 35: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Zeal Example from the text:

Mr. Frank: “We kindle this Hanukkah light to celebrate the great and wonderful deeds wrought through the zeal with which God filled the hearts of the heroic Maccabees.”

Page 36: Please have the following things on your desk:  1. Reading  journals and books

Zeal

Example from the text:

Mr. Frank: “We kindle this Hanukkah light to celebrate the great and wonderful deeds wrought through the zeal with which God filled the hearts of the heroic Maccabees.”

Part of speech: noun

Definition: great enthusiasm; a devotion to a cause, and ideal, or a goal