Spellings Key Words- Reading

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Approaching and answering Question 4
Advertisements

When I say figuratively and not literally! “I think I just dodged a bullet!” Figurative Language is usually used in poetry.
Miss L. Hamilton Extend your Bishop Justus 2013/2014 Year 11 English Literature Controlled Assessment Retake Lesson 1 LQ: Am I able to explore.
English Jeopardy! Created by: Mr. Erickson Created by: Mr. Erickson.
Extend your Bishop Justus 2013/2014 Literary Techniques: Dramatic irony, imagery, simile, metaphor, oxymoron, rule of 3 Formula Words: portrays,
Marko’s Writing Tools. Organization Create a prewriting list of events in chronological order (the order in which events happened). Include a clear beginning.
Thursday 22 nd April 2010 Mood & Atmosphere Success criteria: I understand and identify the techniques used to create atmosphere. I can plan a response.
Lesson 3 Writing a ghost story Writing to: Imagine, Explore, Entertain
Poetry.
UNIT 1 Writing. Spend 1 hour on this section 40 Marks.
Poetry Are all poems the same? What makes poems different? What makes a poem a poem and not a story, report or list? What are the features of a poem?
Literary Devices Objective #6.
Poetry A kind of rhythmic, compressed language that uses figures of speech and imagery to appeal to emotion or imagination.
by Your first and last names
POETRY An introduction:. Key Elements of Poetry Form and Structure Sound Imagery Figurative Language Form and Structure.
Poetry Analysis – Smile Method
The Powerful World of Figurative Language
Poetry Terms – Lit Bk pgs
Poetic Devices English 3 Mrs. Moss.
English First Language Paper 1
LQ: Can I analyse the use of animal imagery in Macbeth?
Analyzing The Raven.
Tuesday 16th May Unseen Poetry
I am Legend Analysing Language & Structure
Paper 1, Section A: Knowledge Organiser
Language Paper 1: Question 5 Descriptive Writing Practice
Poetry Analysis – Smile Method
Elements of Poetry.
How can you use language to present characters?
PAPER 1 Q1 – AO1 ( /4 marks) LIST LIST:
Revision: Language Paper 1 Section A
Construct your literary analysis with PETFACE POINT EVIDENCE TECHNIQUE
AQA ENGLISH LANGUAGE P1 Section A
AF5 - To explain and comment on writers’ use of language
Unseen Poetry.
Reading skills Papers 1 and 2
Language Paper 1: Question 5 Descriptive Writing Practice
Figurative & Stylistic Devices
Useful Sentence Starters: Punctuation (use a variety):
GCSE English Language 2017/18 Session 5
I woke up… LO: how do writers create tension?
Writing analytically PETER checklist Point:
LINKING WORDS (compare/contrast)
Language Paper 1: Question 5 Descriptive Writing
THE NEXT SLIDE IS FOR THE EYES OF THE QUIZ MASTER ONLY!!!
Superlative (the best ie big, bigger, biggest )
Useful Sentence Starters: Punctuation (use a variety):
S Q U How does the writer use language….? /8 Q2 – AO2
POETIC DEVICES.
AQA GCSE Paper 2 Glastonbury and Greenwich fair
Techniques and elements of Literature
Agreeing with a statement
Text Structure: Spatial Imagery Figurative Language Sound Effects
AQA GCSE Paper 1 Glass, Bricks and Dust
Own Words Don’t quote Summarise using different words / phrases.
How writers use language to influence the reader
Examples found in modern songs
S Q U How does the writer use language….? /12 Q2 – AO2 R
Language Paper 1: Question 5 Descriptive Writing Practice
LQ: Can I analyse the aspects of a writer’s style?
Compare the words you found for homelearning with a partner
Have you watched/read The Hunger Games?
Three Ways to Improve your Writing!
Introducing Paper One Section A and B
Literature Grade 8-9.
Narrative Text The gist/central idea
Mrs. Rothring Pre-AICE English Language
Own Words.
Approaching the Unseen Poem
College Essay Voice Ratiocination
Presentation transcript:

Spellings Key Words- Reading Linguistic devices simile metaphor personification repetition onomatopoeia alliteration imagery emotive language anecdote humour Imperative verbs adjectives proper noun Intensifier comparative writer presents demonstrates reveals shows describes phrase emphasises suggests highlights implies symbolises echoes creates impression effective effectively wonder reminds Structural features narrative voice shift in focus location character Introduce develop reiterates spotlight