Upload
bethanie-greer
View
218
Download
2
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Diction: Word Choice
Writers choose words with purpose.
If we analyze the words carefully we can better understand the themes, purpose, and tone.
In order to understand diction we have to understand....
Diction: Word Choice
Denotation: The dictionary or literal meaning of the word.
Example: Plump (adj) = a full, round, and pleasing figure.
Diction: Word Choice
Connotation: All the meanings, associations, and feelings that a word suggests.
Example: Fat (adj)= While similar in denotative meaning to plump, it has a harsh and aggressive connotation.
Diction: Word Choice
Examine the diction in the following sentences. What are the connotations here? Which sentence has a more positive connotation, and which has a more negative connotation?
You look unique today.
You look odd today.
You look weird today.
Diction: Word Choice
Examine the diction in the following sentences.
I am crazy about her.
I love her to the depths of my soul.
What are the connotations here?
Which has a more positive emotional connotation?
How do you imagine the person saying each?
Diction: Word Choice
Categorize the following words as having a positive, negative, or neutral connotation.
Friendly Clever House
Dislike Love Wise
Sincere Crush Pleasant
Diction: Word Choice
Create an X/Y graph for each of the following sets of words, x representing most to least intense and y representing from negative to positive(you may use a dictionary to look up the denotation)
laugh, guffaw, chuckle, titter, giggle, cackle, snicker, roar
self-confident, proud, conceited, egotistical, stuck-up, haughty, smug, condescending
house, home, hut, shack, mansion, cabin, home, residence, dwelling, shanty, chalet
old, mature, experienced, antique, relic, senior, ancient
fat, obese, plump, corpulent, portly, porky, burly, husky, full-figured
Diction: Word Choice
Reading with precision leads to writing with precision.With a partner, come up with as many variations as you can in one minute for the following words:
happy
sad
mad
Diction: Word Choice
Words also sound and feel differently.Example: What do you imagine when you read or hear the word, Rock?
What about, Stone?
Reconsider the sound and look of plump vs fat.
How are they different in look and sound?
Diction: Word Choice
Some terms concerning diction and sound
shift words: words that indicate change: yet, so, however, but, then, although
onomatopoeia - words that imitate sounds. Ex: cuckoo, sizzle, crash
alliteration - the repetition of the initial sounds at the beginning of words close together
assonance - repetition of vowel sounds in words close together. Ex: rise high in the bright sky
cacaphony- a harsh mixture of sounds