LAMP English Opening Assignments Making Inferences Always title

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LAMP English Opening Assignments

LAMP English Opening Assignments

Making Inferences • (Always title and date your O. A. ) On your paper:

Making Inferences • (Always title and date your O. A. ) On your paper: • Read the notes about making inferences and drawing conclusions. (These can be found in your O. A. folder on the cabinet. • Answer the following: – Write the definition for inference as a statement (i. e. To make an inference means…)

Making Inferences #2 Every day after work Paul took his muddy boots off on

Making Inferences #2 Every day after work Paul took his muddy boots off on the steps of the front porch. Alice would have a fit if the boots made it so far as the welcome mat. He then took off his dusty overalls and threw them into a plastic garbage bag; Alice left a new garbage bag tied to the porch railing for him every morning. On his way in the house, he dropped the garbage bag off at the washing machine and went straight up the stairs to the shower as he was instructed. He would eat dinner with her after he was “presentable, ” as Alice had often said. 1. Make an inference: what type of job does Paul work? __________________________ 2. ) How do you know this?

Making Inferences #3 • Read the passage “Social Networking Sites- the Good, the Bad,

Making Inferences #3 • Read the passage “Social Networking Sites- the Good, the Bad, the Ugly. ” It’s in your O. A. folder! • Answer the two multiple choice questions. Write the question and your complete answer. DO NOT WRITE ON THE PASSAGE. • Remember to title and date your O. A.

Making Inferences #4 • During the California Gold Rush of 1849, the world’s supply

Making Inferences #4 • During the California Gold Rush of 1849, the world’s supply of gold more than doubled, and hundreds of thousands of people rushed to California to find their share. Boomtowns popped up to accommodate the visitors. A boomtown is a community that receives sudden and explosive growth and development. San Francisco had around two-hundred residents in 1846, and about 36, 000 in 1852. The few merchants in these boomtowns sold goods for more than ten times what they cost back East. For example, a single pound of flour sold for as much as $17. Not everyone who joined in the California Gold Rush got rich, but most of the boomtown merchants did. 1. Make an inference: Why were boomtown merchants able to sell their products for so much money? 2. How do you know this?

Inference Quiz -On a clean sheet of paper, write you name, the date, number

Inference Quiz -On a clean sheet of paper, write you name, the date, number it 1 -4, and title it – Inference Quiz

Word Crimes https: //www. youtube. com/watch? v=8 Gv 0 Hv. Po. Dc

Word Crimes https: //www. youtube. com/watch? v=8 Gv 0 Hv. Po. Dc

There, Their, They’re • There – to show location • Their – possession –

There, Their, They’re • There – to show location • Their – possession – belonging to • They’re – contraction of They + are – Write the notes from above. Use each correctly in a sentence about babies.

its OR it’s • its: belongs to/possession • it’s: contraction of it + is

its OR it’s • its: belongs to/possession • it’s: contraction of it + is Write the notes from above. Use each correctly in a sentence about a lost dog.

TO / TWO / TOO • Two : number • To: – Preposition (location)

TO / TWO / TOO • Two : number • To: – Preposition (location) – Before the verb of an • Too: infinitive – Also – show excessiveness • USE THEM ALL IN SEPARATE SENTENCES! YOU SHOULD HAVE 3 SENTENCES! • Also, please notice how “separate” is spelled above. Learn it. There is “a rat” in the middle of it.

Your vs. You’re • Your: possessive • You’re : contraction of you + are

Your vs. You’re • Your: possessive • You’re : contraction of you + are Write the notes from above and use each in a sentence about manners.

EFFECT VS. AFFECT • Effect is a noun • Affect is a verb Write

EFFECT VS. AFFECT • Effect is a noun • Affect is a verb Write the example. Then make a sentence of your own for each word.

Who’s / Whose • Who’s = Who + is (contraction) • Whose = possession

Who’s / Whose • Who’s = Who + is (contraction) • Whose = possession • Use each correctly in a sentence about dirty socks.

Then vs. Than Use THEN when speaking of time: I painted my nails, then

Then vs. Than Use THEN when speaking of time: I painted my nails, then I plucked my eyebrows. Use THAN when talking about a comparison. Your hair is uglier than a floor mop. Use each in a sentence of your own.

Lie vs. Lay (Write all of these notes and examples) • Lay means to

Lie vs. Lay (Write all of these notes and examples) • Lay means to put something [or someone] down. Because lay is a transitive verb, a direct object will come after it. A direct object receives the action of the verb. Read this example: Before returning to the Godzilla marathon on late night TV, Quentin laid his sleeping son Jeremy on the bed and covered him with a quilt. • Quentin laid whom on the bed? Jeremy. • Lie, on the other hand, means to rest or recline. Lie is an intransitive verb, so no direct object will follow. The center of Diane's bed always smells like dog because Rel iable, her beagle, lies there every chance he gets. • What is Reliable doing in the middle of the bed? Resting.

Lie vs. Lay Practice • Which word would be used in each sentence? 1.

Lie vs. Lay Practice • Which word would be used in each sentence? 1. ) Sassy was feeling tired, so she decided to ______ down in her favorite spot on the rug. 2. ) Please ______ your pencils on your desk when you are finished with your work. 3. ) Rafael always _______ the Directv controller where no one can find it.

Who vs. Whom • Who is used as the subject of a sentence. •

Who vs. Whom • Who is used as the subject of a sentence. • Whom is used as the object of the sentence (receives the action) Examples: Who wants to eat ice cream after school? To whom would you like to give your extra ice cream?

Who vs. Whom Examples A trick: Figure it out by turning the sentence around

Who vs. Whom Examples A trick: Figure it out by turning the sentence around and replacing the who or whom with he/she or him/her. If he is wrong, so is who. If him is wrong, so is whom. It was Sam ______ helped the new student. He helped the new student. Him helped the new student. Since ‘he’ is correct, the sentence should read: It was Sam who helped the new student.

Practice 1. ) I have not seen the man _____lives in the hut by

Practice 1. ) I have not seen the man _____lives in the hut by the beach for a week. 2. ) You sat with _____ during the movie? 3. ) I saw Wes, a football player ______I had met after the game. 4. ) _____ stole the chocolate chip cookies?