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English 1 Advanced: Class 10

English 1 Advanced: Class 10. Richard Wilson. Registration Idiom Homework Review Chapter 2: Third Reading. Agenda. Notices. Friday 18 th April. Quiz. Idiom. Thinking Outside the Box. “A way of solving a problem by thinking about it in different and unusual ways”. Puzzle 1. The Ship.

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English 1 Advanced: Class 10

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  1. English 1 Advanced: Class 10 Richard Wilson

  2. Registration • Idiom • Homework Review • Chapter 2: Third Reading Agenda

  3. Notices

  4. Friday 18th April Quiz

  5. Idiom

  6. Thinking Outside the Box “A way of solving a problem by thinking about it in different and unusual ways”

  7. Puzzle 1

  8. The Ship

  9. The Ship The ship is slowly sinking into the Pacific Ocean None of the passengers are frightened or even worried. How is this possible?

  10. Answer

  11. Puzzle 2

  12. Murder in a Bar

  13. Murder in a Bar Dave & Paul met at a bar and both order vodka with ice. Dave quickly drank his drink and ordered another, Paul was drinking slowly. Paul suddenly falls dead. Dave is fine. Someone had tried to kill both men. Why did Paul die but Dave was ok?

  14. Answer

  15. Puzzle 3

  16. The Cowboy

  17. The Cowboy The Cowboy rode into town on Friday. He stayed for 4 days, and then left on Friday. How is this possible?

  18. Friday Answer

  19. Puzzle 4

  20. The Apartment

  21. The Apartment A man lives on the 12th floor of the apartment block. He always takes the elevator to the 8th floor, and then walks to the 12th floor. Why does he do this?

  22. Answer

  23. Homework Review Complete main ideas and close reading questions (chapter 2, reading 2). Then: Pg. 43-45: Synonyms, Using the Dictionary, Word Forms

  24. Statements: • 2 • 5 • 6 • 8 Main Ideas

  25. Statements: • C • C • B Close Reading

  26. Valuable • Food • Cross • Anger • Liquid Synonyms

  27. 4 • 3 • 1 • 2 Using the Dictionary 1

  28. 2 • 4 • 3 • 1 Using the Dictionary 2

  29. admire, admiring, admiringly • correspondence, corresponding, correspondingly • designation, designated • intensity, intensify, intense • permanent, permanently • pioneer, pioneer Word Forms 1

  30. designation • pioneers • correspond • permanent • intensity • admires Word Forms 2

  31. Reading 3: Abstract Impressionism Pg. 47

  32. Jackson Pollock (1912-1956)

  33. “art that does not attempt to represent reality, instead using only shapes, patterns and colours” Abstract

  34. “a style of art where the painter attempts to express inner emotions rather than external reality” Expressionism

  35. Highlighting important information Pg. 47

  36. One of the best ways to understand Abstract Expressionism —or any art form— is through the words of an artist, while considering one of his paintings. One of the most famous Abstract Expressionists, or action painters, was Jackson Pollock (1912–1956), who created one of the most original forms of expression in the history of American painting. Paragraph 3

  37. In Pollock’s work Autumn Rhythm: No. 30, the paint is dribbled and flung upon the canvas , which, as Pollock worked on it, was placed flat on the floor rather than upright on an easel. The end result is unpremeditated, and the “happy accident” is an integral part of the imagery and a reference to its spontaneity. On an off-white ground, the primary color is black, with a secondary color of rust-orange and touches of numerous other hues. Paragraph 4

  38. The painting exists as an exciting aesthetic experience—an experience the viewer can share because the painting itself explains in an instant the process of its making. Typically of Pollock’s work, the overall effect is without depth of space or focal center. While the action glides across the surface, a structure, a unity, and even an order eventually evolve in the multitude of complexities. Paragraph 5

  39. It was noted in interviews that Pollock and other Abstract Expressionists “are not concerned with representing a preconceived idea , but rather with being involved with an experience of paint and canvas, without interference from the suggested forms and colors of existing objects. Pollock does not know beforehand how a particular work of his will end. He is impelled to work by the urge, the strong need, to create, and this urge and what it produces are forever unknowable. We can experience the unknowable but not understand it intellectually.” Paragraph 6

  40. “…when I am in my painting, I’m not aware of what I’m doing. It is only after a sort of ‘get acquainted’ period that I see what I have been about. I have no fear of making changes, destroying the image, etc., because the painting has a life of its own. I try to let it come through. It is only when I lose contact with the painting that the result is a mess. Otherwise there is pure harmony, an easy give and take, and the painting comes out well.” Paragraph 7

  41. Read In Full Main Ideas & Close Reading Questions

  42. Pg. 51-55: • Vocabulary, Collocations, Synonyms & Antonyms Homework

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