31
Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick

Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7Mrs. Fendrick

Page 2: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Bell Work

Give an example of something ordinary and somethingextraordinary.

Page 3: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Cornell Notes Use only blue or black ink or regular pencil.

Name (first and last) DateReading Period #

Fold left side of paper 2.5 inches.Holes go on left side.

Vocabulary Theme 2 – Lesson 7

ordinary Definition:

Essential Question: How will learning new vocabulary help me?

Head a clean sheet of paper like the above example.

Page 4: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Name (first and last) DateReading Period #

Vocabulary Theme 2 – Lesson 7Essential Question: How will learning new vocabulary help me?

ordinary Definition:

Page 5: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Definition: common, normal, not special, not designer

ordinary (adjective)

Example: It was an ordinary summer day until the sky suddenly got dark and the tornado warning sounded.

Page 6: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

ordinary Definition: common; not special Example:

suit Definition: Example:

Name (first and last) DateReading Period #

Vocabulary Theme 2 – Lesson 7

E.Q.: How will learning new vocabulary help me?

Page 7: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Definition: to satisfy or suit (verb)

Example: A 10-room house would suit a family with six children.

be good for you

Page 8: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

ordinary Definition: common; not special Example:

suit Definition: to satisfy or be good for you Example:

Name (first and last) DateReading Period #

Vocabulary Theme 2 – Lesson 7

treason Definition: Example:

E.Q.: How will learning new vocabulary help me?

Page 9: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Definition:to betray your country or be disloyal to it

treason (noun)

Example: Treason is a serious crime in every country.

Page 10: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Benedict Arnold changed sides in 1779. He was a general in the Revolutionary War who got mad about not being promoted and went to fight for the British Army.

Page 11: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

ordinary Definition: common; not special Example:

suit Definition: to satisfy or be good for you Example:

Name (first and last) DateReading Period #

Vocabulary Theme 2 – Lesson 7

treason Definition: to be disloyal to your country Example:

convince

E.Q.: How will learning new vocabulary help me?

Definition: Example:

Page 12: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Definition: persuade or to get someone to believe you

convince (adjective)

Example: The lawyer tried to convince the jury of his client’s innocence.

Page 13: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

ordinary Definition: common; not special Example:

suit Definition: to satisfy or be good for you Example:

Name (first and last) DateReading Period #

Vocabulary Theme 2 – Lesson 7

treason Definition: to be disloyal to your country Example:

convince

E.Q.: How will learning new vocabulary help me?

Definition: persuade Example:

reject Definition: Example:

Page 14: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Definition: to turn someone or something down; refuse

reject (verb)

Example: John rejected the possibility that he could be wrong.

Page 15: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

ordinary Definition: common; not special Example:

suit Definition: to satisfy or be good for you Example:

Name (first and last) DateReading Period #

Vocabulary Theme 2 – Lesson 7

treason Definition: to be disloyal to your country Example:

convince

E.Q.: How will learning new vocabulary help me?

Definition: persuade Example:

reject Definition: to turn down or refuse Example:

disown Definition: Example:

Page 16: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Definition: to break connection with someone; to shun or refuse to acknowledge a person

disown (verb)

Example:

My father said in jest that he would disown me if I wore the hat with the purple feathers.

Page 17: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

defeatist Definition: Example:

Page 18: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Definition: expecting to losedefeatist (adjective)

Example: Even though he had a good chance of winning, Michael’s defeatist attitude kept him from entering the contest.

or fail

Page 19: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

defeatist Definition: expecting to lose or fail Example:

summary Definition:Example:

Page 20: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Definition: a few summary (noun) sentences which tell

the most important things that happened

Example: After reading the article, Oliver wrote an IVF topic sentence to begin his summary paragraph.

Page 21: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

defeatist Definition: expecting to lose or fail Example:

flashback

Definition: the most important things that happenedExample:

summary

Definition: Example:

Page 22: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

Definition: when a storyflashback (noun) switches back to an

earlier time

Example: In the movie Up, short flashback scenes show Carl remembering his wife Ellie when the two of them were young.

Page 23: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

A story can also switch narrators in each chapter so it is told from multiple points of view.

Page 24: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

A story can presents ideas by showing a day in the life of a character.

“Johnny Jetpack was awakened by Thor, a lifelike robot who resembled Johnny’s father. Johnny liked the version 7 parental unit so much better than his last android. Thor had realistic hair, blinking eyes, and was composed of 75 percent muscle tissue. Johnny didn’t miss his dad so much now that Thor was around. In fact, Johnny didn’t know how his dad had managed without someone like Thor when he was growing up. Biobots had been around since 2075, but Johnny’s dad had only had a crude metal figure on wheels to keep him company.” © Mrs. Fendrick

Page 25: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

ordinary Definition: common; not special Example:

suit Definition: to satisfy or be good for you Example:

Name (first and last) DateReading Period #

Vocabulary Theme 2 – Lesson 7

treason Definition: to be disloyal to your country Example:

convince

E.Q.: How will learning new vocabulary help me?

Definition: persuade Example:

reject Definition: to turn down or refuse Example:

disown Definition: to break a connection Example:

Page 26: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

defeatist Definition: expecting to lose or fail Example:

summary Definition: the most important things that happened

Summary

Example:

flashback Definition: when a story goes back to an earlier time Example:

Page 27: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

SummaryLearning new words will help me understand what I read.

Page 29: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

1. Why might a person want to disown a dog?

2. Would it be easy to convince a friend of your innocence? Why or why not?

3. Why is it defeatist to give up after only one try?

4. Which would suit you better—reading an adventure story or a fairy tale?

Page 30: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

This book is a retelling of Beauty and the Beast. It takes place in our time.

The main character, Kyle, plays a joke on a girl who is a witch. She turns him into a beast who grows fur and fangs. He can only break the spell by falling in love.

Page 31: Theme 2 – Vocabulary 7 Mrs. Fendrick. Bell Work Give an example of something ordinary and something extraordinary

This book makes fun of fairy tales.