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Susan Ebbers 20051 English Words from Latin, Greek, and Anglo-Saxon Increase spelling, vocabulary, and reading comprehension Adapted from Susan Ebbers.

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Presentation on theme: "Susan Ebbers 20051 English Words from Latin, Greek, and Anglo-Saxon Increase spelling, vocabulary, and reading comprehension Adapted from Susan Ebbers."— Presentation transcript:

1 Susan Ebbers 20051 English Words from Latin, Greek, and Anglo-Saxon Increase spelling, vocabulary, and reading comprehension Adapted from Susan Ebbers

2 Susan Ebbers 20052 Basic Terms root form: inspector, thermal base word: unlikely prefix: re-, un-, dis- suffix: -able, -ive, -ly derivation-a word formed from an existing word, root, or affix: electric, electricity } affixes

3 Susan Ebbers 20053 Three Periods of the English Language Old English ~A.D. 450-1100 Anglo-Saxon, Scandinavian, (some) Latin Middle English ~A.D. 1100-1500 French-Norman, Latin, Greek Modern English ~A.D. 1500-present Greek, Latin, Adopted English

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5 5 wh-what, sh-ship, th-thumb, ch-church, ng-king, nk-thank vowel teams: teeth, foot r-controlled: farm, star, storm, shirt compound words: mankind, blackbird common words: love, child, house, heart (often one syllable) prepositions, articles, conjunctions: with, to, for, and, the, but… words with silent letters: knee, night, comb, wrinkle, could, thought Anglo-Saxon: Indo-European Origins

6 Susan Ebbers 20056 Basic Old English Words Down-to-earth and true-blue, the first learned and the last forgotten. We work and eat and laugh and weep, Sing and play and rise and sleep, Hope and pray with all our might, Shun the wrong and love the right.

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8 8 Latin: Some Common Roots transportable disruption prescription retractor interception projectile destruction conductor dismissal subversive edict to carry to break to write to pull to take to throw to build to lead to send to turn to speak

9 Susan Ebbers 20059 20 Most Frequent Prefixes in School Texts 1. unable 2. review inedible (impotent, illegal, irresponsible) distrust enlighten (empower) nonsense inside, implant overcome misguidedsubmarineprefixinterruptforewarn derailtransfersupersonicsemicircleantitrust midtermunderfed Analysis: White, Sowell, and Yanagihara 1989

10 Susan Ebbers 200510 Prefixes: Meaning and Connotation Somewhat Positive pro-co-bene- super-com-be- en-, em- ad- Often Negative dis-, de- non-sub- in-un-mis- mal- anti, contra a-

11 Susan Ebbers 200511 Derivational Suffixes Derivational suffixes change the part of speech words ending with –tion are often nouns words ending with –ive are often adjectives words ending with –ish are often adjectives words ending with –ity are often nouns What about -ment, -ous, -ness?

12 Susan Ebbers 200512 English Language Learners PROFICIENCY LEVELS Intermediate Level: Understands roots and affixes Decodes multi-syllabic words Advanced Level: Uses word parts to determine word meanings

13 Susan Ebbers 200513 Cognates Connect English and Spanish through Latin Origins Romance Languages (e.g., Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian, etc.) share the same Latin roots Morta: Roman goddess of death Example: The Latin root for the word death is mort. The French spell it morte and the Spanish, muerte. In English, we have a whole network of related words: mortal, immortal, mortality, mortician, mortuary, postmortem, etc. Ebbers, 2004

14 Susan Ebbers 200514 Greek Combining Forms hydrographgeo pyropolisneuro orthoscopephoto thermcratpsych chronphobepseud onymcrypthelio logyspherethe, theo

15 Susan Ebbers 200515 Counting in Greek and Latin monounidi bidu, duotri tetraquadripenta hexaseptoct novedecadeci centmillipoly multisemihemi

16 Susan Ebbers 200516 Developing content-specific, academic vocabulary depends on a basic understanding of Greek and Latin Sixty percent of the words in English texts are of Latin and Greek origin Bear et al., 1996; Henry, 1997

17 Susan Ebbers 200517 Content-Specific Greek Terms Anatomy and Medical Terms esophagus, thyroid, diagnosis, psoriasis, dyslexia Studies and Sciences biology, seismology, morphology, geochronometry Animals and Plants arachnid, amphibian, chlorophyll, dinosaur, nectar Theatre and the Arts charisma, drama, chorus, muse, symphony, acoustics

18 Susan Ebbers 200518 photo graph poly graph mimeo graph phono graph tele graph para graph tele gram mammo gram histo gram ana gram crypto gram mono gram electrocardio gram photo grapher carto grapher geo grapher crypto grapher autobio grapher xylo grapher paleo grapher bio grapher graph ite graph eme graph ologist graph ic graph ically grammar school grammar books rules of grammar gramma tical gramma tically un gramma tical un gramma tically gramma tology graph grammar gram, graph to write, written Greek gram

19 Susan Ebbers 200519 Look Inside—Look Outside pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis 1.Look inside the word for known word parts: prefixes, roots or combining forms, suffixes. 2.Use the analogy strategy—“I don’t know this word, but I know pneumonia and I know volcano, so by analogy, this word might have something to do with lungs and heat.” 3.Look outside the word at context clues, visuals The coal miners, coughing and wheezing, suffered from pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis.

20 Susan Ebbers 200520 SO MANY SYNONYMS ANGLO-SAXON, FRENCH, LATIN, and GREEK Anglo- Saxon FrenchLatin or Greek cooksautéconcoct holysacredconsecrated kinglyroyalregal wrecksabotagesubvert heartenencourageinspire showcinematheater See also Bryson, 1990; Lederer, 1991; King, 2000

21 Susan Ebbers 200521 ENGLISH: A RICH VOCABULARY SO MANY SHADES OF MEANING “A Positive Emotion” GLADPLEASEDDELIGHTED OVERJOYEDHAPPYCAREFREE LIGHTHEARTEDMERRYJOYOUS JOYFULCHEERYCHEERFUL CONTENTBLITHEBLISSFUL SATISFIEDBOUYANTBEATIFIC ECSTATICEUPHORICEUPEPSIC

22 Susan Ebbers 200522 Danke Merci Gratias ευχαριστώ /efharisto/ THANK YOU


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