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Good Day thee t hou spongy scurvy-valiant death-tokens!

Good Day thee t hou spongy scurvy-valiant death-tokens!. It’s Thursday. We have much to accomplish today, so let’s get busy. Today’s Classroom Learning Objectives. Students will be able to write 5 lines in response to a prompt.

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Good Day thee t hou spongy scurvy-valiant death-tokens!

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  1. Good Day thee thou spongy scurvy-valiant death-tokens! It’s Thursday. We have much to accomplish today, so let’s get busy.

  2. Today’s Classroom Learning Objectives • Students will be able to write 5 lines in response to a prompt. • Students will write two new words in their study guide and will identify meaning, antonyms, and a synonyms for each word. • Students will identify figurative language and will be able to identify similes, hyperbole, personification, pun, and metaphors.

  3. Do Now “Peter piper picked a peck of pickled peppers” and “Silly Sally saw seashells by the seashore” are both examples of what type of figurative language? Write your own definition for this type of figurative language?

  4. Information • 42 Days of scholl remaining • Figurative Language Assignment is due today - must have this completed - started Thursday • Journals - 2 Free writes this week

  5. Today’s Classroom Learning Objectives • Students will be able to write 5 lines in response to a prompt. • Students will write two new words in their study guide and will identify meaning, antonyms, and a synonyms for each word. • Students will identify figurative language and will be able to identify similes, hyperbole, personification, pun, and metaphors.

  6. Assurance – (n.) a pledge; freedom from doubt, self-confidenceSynonyms – promise, sureness, poise Antonyms – uncertainty, doubt, insecurity

  7. Asylum– (n.) an institution for the care of children, elderly people; a place of safetySynonyms – Sanatorium, sanctuary, refuge

  8. Do Now “Peter piper picked a peck of pickled peppers” and “Silly Sally saw seashells by the seashore” are both examples of what type of figurative language? Write your own definition for this type of figurative language?

  9. Metaphors and Similes • Similes - uses “like” or “as” to compare objects - ex: “My love is like a red rose.” • Metaphors - compares two unlike objects - “My love is a red, red rose.”

  10. A Little bit about puns • A pun is simply a play on words - tries to create a new meaning for a word - double meaning of words • An Example - a man is wounded in a sword fight, afterward he says, “Ask for me tomorrow and you shall find me a grave man.”

  11. Figurative Language assignment • Find definitions • Find examples - can come from anywhere • Illustrate examples - draw pictures • Must be completed by the end of class

  12. Today’s Classroom Learning Objectives • Students will be able to write 5 lines in response to a prompt. • Students will write two new words in their study guide and will identify meaning, antonyms, and a synonyms for each word. • Students will identify figurative language and will be able to identify similes, hyperbole, personification, pun, and metaphors.

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