HAPPY THURSDAY Find your seats Turn in Spelling

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HAPPY THURSDAY • Find your seats. • Turn in Spelling Lesson 10 to bin

HAPPY THURSDAY • Find your seats. • Turn in Spelling Lesson 10 to bin if finished. • Focus: andr and auto due tomorrow. • Make sure you have a sharpened pencil, a whiteboard, marker, and eraser.

INTERPRETING POETRY • Connotations and Denotations • Using Auditory and Visualizing Skills • Objective:

INTERPRETING POETRY • Connotations and Denotations • Using Auditory and Visualizing Skills • Objective: to use auditory and visual skills to interpret a poem’s connotative (secondary) meaning.

Connotation vs. Denotation • Connotation is the emotional and imaginative association surrounding a word.

Connotation vs. Denotation • Connotation is the emotional and imaginative association surrounding a word. • Denotation is the strict dictionary meaning of a word.

“You may live in a house, but we live in a home. ” •

“You may live in a house, but we live in a home. ” • If you were to look up the words house and home in a dictionary, you would find that both words have approximately the same meaning. . . • - "a dwelling place. " house • However, the speaker in the sentence above suggests that home has an additional meaning. home

Connotation and denotation • Many people associate such things as comfort, love, security, or

Connotation and denotation • Many people associate such things as comfort, love, security, or privacy with a home. love comfort • However do not necessarily make the same associations with a house. • The various feelings, images, and memories that surround a word make up its connotation. security privacy HOME

Final Practice – Connotation and Denotation • Match each of the following words with

Final Practice – Connotation and Denotation • Match each of the following words with its denotation and its connotation. Denotations 1. Cherub Connotations a. The son of a king f. ambitions and desires 2. Prince b. Light from the sun g. innocent and childlike 3. Fox c. A wolf-like mammal h. Noble and admirable 4. Dream d. An angel i. Clever or sneaky 5. Sunshine e. Visions during sleep j. Warmth and happiness

Final Practice – Connotation and Denotation • Match each of the following words with

Final Practice – Connotation and Denotation • Match each of the following words with its denotation and its connotation. Denotations 1. Cherub Connotations a. The son of a king f. ambitions and desires 2. Prince b. Light from the sun g. innocent and childlike 3. Fox c. A wolf-like mammal h. Noble and admirable 4. Dream d. An angel i. Clever or sneaky 5. Sunshine e. Visions during sleep j. Warmth and happiness

Final Practice – Connotation and Denotation • Match each of the following words with

Final Practice – Connotation and Denotation • Match each of the following words with its denotation and its connotation. Denotations 1. Cherub Connotations a. The son of a king f. ambitions and desires 2. Prince b. Light from the sun g. innocent and childlike 3. Fox c. A wolf-like mammal h. Noble and admirable 4. Dream d. An angel i. Clever or sneaky 5. Sunshine e. Visions during sleep j. Warmth and happiness

Final Practice – Connotation and Denotation • Match each of the following words with

Final Practice – Connotation and Denotation • Match each of the following words with its denotation and its connotation. Denotations 1. Cherub Connotations a. The son of a king f. ambitions and desires 2. Prince b. Light from the sun g. innocent and childlike 3. Fox c. A A wolf-like mammal h. Noble and admirable 4. Dream d. An angel i. Clever or sneaky 5. Sunshine e. Visions during sleep j. Warmth and happiness

Final Practice – Connotation and Denotation • Match each of the following words with

Final Practice – Connotation and Denotation • Match each of the following words with its denotation and its connotation. Denotations 1. Cherub Connotations a. The son of a king f. ambitions and desires 2. Prince b. Light from the sun g. innocent and childlike 3. Fox c. A wolf-like mammal h. Noble and admirable 4. Dream d. An angel i. Clever or sneaky 5. Sunshine e. Visions during sleep j. Warmth and happiness

Final Practice – Connotation and Denotation • Match each of the following words with

Final Practice – Connotation and Denotation • Match each of the following words with its denotation and its connotation. Denotations 1. Cherub Connotations a. The son of a king f. ambitions and desires 2. Prince b. Light from the sun g. innocent and childlike 3. Fox c. A wolf-like mammal h. Noble and admirable 4. Dream d. An angel i. Clever or sneaky 5. Sunshine e. Visions during sleep j. Warmth and happiness

Interpreting Poetry • Using both audio and visual skills to interpret a poem’s deeper

Interpreting Poetry • Using both audio and visual skills to interpret a poem’s deeper meaning. Step 1: With a partner collaborate to define “Storm. ” Step 2: Pairs – Come up with connotations for Storm. • What do you associate/connect with a storm? • What do you feel when you think of a storm? Remember these ideas as we move on.

“Storm in the Black Forest” by D. H. Lawrence • As you listen to

“Storm in the Black Forest” by D. H. Lawrence • As you listen to the poem, on your paper, quick draw what you hear. (The poem will be read multiple times. )

Interpreting Poetry • Step one: Reread the poem silently to yourself. • Step two:

Interpreting Poetry • Step one: Reread the poem silently to yourself. • Step two: look up any unfamiliar words; if needed. • Step three: Use one of the sentence frames to write your own interpretation of what the poem is about; the connotative meaning. Is there another message about the poem the author is trying to convey? Write your response on the same paper as your drawing. . • Sentence Frames: - I think the poem is about. . . because. . . (support your idea; use a direct quote) OR - I think one of the ideas or themes in the poem is. . . because. . . (support your idea; use a direct quote)

Ticket out the Door • On a Post-it • Did anyone’s interpretation of the

Ticket out the Door • On a Post-it • Did anyone’s interpretation of the poem surprise you and make you rethink your interpretation? Explain.

Extended Practice

Extended Practice

Read it in text. • Since everyone reacts emotionally to certain words, writers often

Read it in text. • Since everyone reacts emotionally to certain words, writers often deliberately select words that they think will influence your reactions and appeal to your emotions. Read the dictionary definition below. • cock roach (kok' roch'), n. any of an order of nocturnal insects, usually brown with flattened oval bodies, some species of which are household pests inhabiting kitchens, areas around water pipes, etc. [Spanish cucaracha]

A cockroach? • 1. What does the word cockroach mean to you? • 2.

A cockroach? • 1. What does the word cockroach mean to you? • 2. Is a cockroach merely an insect or is it also a household nuisance and a disgusting creature? • See what meanings poets Wild and Morley find in roaches in the following poems.

Roaches breeding quickly and without design, laboring up drainpipes through filth to the light;

Roaches breeding quickly and without design, laboring up drainpipes through filth to the light; Last night when I got up to let the dog out I spied a cockroach in the bathroom I read once they are among crouched flat on the cool the most antediluvian of creatures, porcelain, surviving everything, and in more delicate primitive times antennae probing the toothpaste capthrived to the size of your hand. . . and feasting himself on a gob yet when sinking asleep of it in the bowl: or craning at the stars, I killed him with one unprofessional. I can feel their light feet blow, probing in my veins, scattering arms and legs their whiskers nibbling and half his body in the sink. . . the insides of my toes; I would have no truck with and neck arched, roaches, feel their patient scrambling crouched like lions in the ledges up the dark tubes of my throat. of sewers ---Peter Wild their black eyes in the darkness

from Nursery Rhymes for the Tender-hearted Scuttle, scuttle, little roach. How you run when

from Nursery Rhymes for the Tender-hearted Scuttle, scuttle, little roach. How you run when I approach: Up above the pantry shelf Hastening to secrete yourself. Most adventurous of vermin, How I wish I could determine How you spend your hours of ease, Perhaps reclining on the cheese. Cook has gone, and all is dark. Then the kitchen is your park; In the garbage heap that she leaves Do you browse among the tea leaves? How delightful to suspect All the places you have trekked: Does your long antenna whisk its Gentle tip across the biscuits? Do you linger, little soul, Drowsing in our sugar bowl? Or, abandonment most utter, Shake a shimmy on the butter? Do you chant your simple tunes Swimming in the baby's prunes? Then, when dawn comes, do you slink Homeward to the kitchen sink? Timid roach, why be so shy? We are brothers, --Christopher thou and I, In the midnight, like yourself, Morley

Reading into the poems… • Reread the dictionary definition. • cock roach (kok' roch'),

Reading into the poems… • Reread the dictionary definition. • cock roach (kok' roch'), n. any of an order of nocturnal insects, usually brown with flattened oval bodies, some species of which are household pests inhabiting kitchens, areas around water pipes, etc. • 6. Which of the denotative characteristics of a cockroach do both poets include in the poems?

Reading into the poems… • 7. What characteristics does Wild give his roaches that

Reading into the poems… • 7. What characteristics does Wild give his roaches that are not in the dictionary definition? • 8. What additional characteristics does Morley give to roaches?

Reading into the poems… • In each poem, the insect acquires meaning beyond its

Reading into the poems… • In each poem, the insect acquires meaning beyond its dictionary definition. Both poets lead us away from a literal view of roaches to a non-literal one. • 9. Which poet succeeds in giving roaches favorable connotations? • 10. Which poet comes closer to expressing your own feelings about roaches?

More practice…. . �Directions: For these conditions, first think of a word with a

More practice…. . �Directions: For these conditions, first think of a word with a positive connotation, and then think of a word with a negative connotation. � �Condition Positive Connotation Negative Connotation � 1. Overweight � 2. Short � 3. Not smart � 4. Unattractive � 5. Non-athletic � 6. Self-focused