1 / 12

Determining Word Meanings: Figurative & Connotative

Test Prep Tuesday: March 25. Determining Word Meanings: Figurative & Connotative. Would you rather trudge through the snow or stroll through the snow? The verbs have similar meanings, but each has a different connotative meaning, the feeling suggested by a word or phrase.

ford
Télécharger la présentation

Determining Word Meanings: Figurative & Connotative

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Test Prep Tuesday: March 25 Determining Word Meanings: Figurative & Connotative

  2. Would you rather trudge through the snow or stroll through the snow? The verbs have similar meanings, but each has a different connotative meaning, the feeling suggested by a word or phrase. Trudge connotates a struggle, but stroll suggests a relaxing walk.

  3. Writers also use words in imaginative ways to create interesting effects. The kind of language is called figurative language. Figurative meanings are different from the usual meanings of the words. ` ````

  4. What is being compared in the illustration below? Why do you think the writer compared the girl’s tears to rain?

  5. Copy the chart and notes below:

  6. The Gold Watch Sunlight burst through the window and woke Gabriel that bright summer day. He felt disoriented, as if he’d been sleeping for years. He didn’t even know what time it was! But that was no surprise-he was always late. He pulled on his clothes and went out to the yard where he found his mother sorting through boxes of old things. “Why did you get all that junk out of the garage?” Gabriel asked. “It’s not ‘junk’,” his mother answered. “These are things I’ve saved over the years, but it’s time to have a yard sale and let them go.” Gabriel’s mother pulled a broken coffee maker out of one box, the electrical cord trailing behind it like a tail. Next, his mother held up a pocket watch as golden as a tiny sun.

  7. The Gold Watch Figurative language often makes a comparison between two things. To what does the author compare the electrical cord, and how does this make you picture the coffee maker?

  8. The Gold Watch Read the chart below and complete it using what you know about figurative language.

  9. Quick Write Now look at the first sentence of the story, “Sunlight burst through the window…” How does this personification help describe the sun’s effect on Gabriel?

  10. The Gold Watch (continued) “This old thing was your grandfather’s,” she said, smiling at the watch like it was a familiar friend. “I don’t think it works. I suppose people would think it’s pretty worthless.” But Gabriel asked his mother for the time, wound up the watch, and let it swing from its chain like a pendulum. The ticking sound it made was as steady as a heartbeat. Just then, some storm clouds crossed the sun, heavy with the rain of a summer storm. But Gabriel now had a new treasure, which he polished until it shined, and he tucked it carefully into his pocket so he would always know the time.

  11. The Gold Watch (continued) Create the T-Chart: Positive Words/ Negative Words/ Phrases Phrases

  12. Which word from the story best describes how Gabriel feels about the watch? A. treasure B. worthless C. heartbeat D. familiar

More Related