Unit 19, Lesson 8

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Unit 19, Lesson 8 February 10, 2011

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Unit 19, Lesson 8. February 10, 2011. 1. Listening for the Stressed Syllable. Please turn to workbook page 39 Listen to the words I say Listen for the stressed, or accented, syllable in each word Repeat the word if necessary - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Unit 19, Lesson 8

Page 1: Unit 19, Lesson 8

Unit 19, Lesson 8

February 10, 2011

Page 2: Unit 19, Lesson 8

1. Listening for the Stressed Syllable

• Please turn to workbook page 39• Listen to the words I say• Listen for the stressed, or accented, syllable in

each word• Repeat the word if necessary• Put an “X” in the box to mark the position of

the stressed syllable

Page 3: Unit 19, Lesson 8

Workbook Page 39

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX

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2. Build It: Words with Affixes

• Refer to the list of words that we came up with yesterday if you get stuck or need help

• Please turn to workbook page 40• Read the base words and the affixes in the

square• Combine base words and affixes to build as

many REAL words as possible• Write each word in the correct column

Page 5: Unit 19, Lesson 8

Workbook Page 40

ANSWERS WILL VARY!

miscastmisstate

misstatementmisunderstand

misfitmisinformmisinterpret

overcastoverstate

overstatementoverdriveovertired

casterstatement

fitnessinformer

interpreterdriver

tiredness

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3. Fill In: Words with Affixes

• Please turn to workbook page 41• Read each sentence• Fill in the blank with an affixes word from the

previous exercise• Clarify any unfamiliar meaning

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Workbook Page 41

overcast

misinterpretovertired

interpreter

tirednessmisunderstand or

misstateoverdrive

fitness

misinform

statement

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3. Fill In: Homophones

• Homophones are word pairs or triplets that are pronounced alike but have different spellings and different meanings

• Please turn to workbook page 42• Complete the chart by filling in each blank

with a homophone from hardcover page 5• Read each sentence and fill in the blank with a

homophone from the chart

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Workbook Page 42pail

mailtail

waistroad

palewaist

mailtale

rode

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4. Review: Predicate Nominative

• A noun can be the subject, a direct object, an indirect object of the preposition, or a predicate nominative

• When a sentence has a form of the verb be as the main verb, the noun that follows the verb is a predicate nominative

• The verb be can never take a direct object

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4. Identify It: Noun Functions• Please turn to workbook page 43• Identify the use of the underlined noun• Use context to decide if the underlined noun should be

labeled as a subject, direct object, or a predicate nominative• Put an “X” in the appropriate box

• The subject answers the question what did they (he/she/it) do?

• The direct object answers the question what did they (he/she/it) do it to?

• The predicate nominative comes after the linking verb and renames the subject

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Workbook Page 43

XX

X

X

X

X

XX

XX

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4. Diagram It: Predicate Nominative

• Please turn to workbook page 44• Underline the simple subject• Draw an arrow from the predicate nominative to

the subject• Diagram the sentence• Please realize that it continues to workbook page

45

• Example to follow

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4. Diagram It: Predicate Nominative

• The girl is a runner

• Directions:• Identify the subject, the linking verb, and the predicate nominative• Answer the following questions

• Who (what is the subject)?• Is the verb be used as a helping verb or a linking verb?• Is there a noun following the linking verb?• What is the noun called?

S LV PN

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• Example:

4. Diagram It: Predicate Nominative

girl

The

is

a

runner

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Workbook Page 44

My

nickname is Mercury

Raymond is

my older

brother

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Workbook Page 44

I am runner

the fastest in groupmy age

Squeaky will be

a

champion

Fiber optics is technologya new

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5. Instructional Text: “Raymond’s Run”

• “Raymond’s Run” is a fiction story• A fiction story tells about events that did not

really happen. – A fiction story does have plot structure

• While you read, underline thing that describe Squeaky

• Put question marks in the margin if you have questions about what you have read

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6. Spotlight on Characters

• After you read:– We will focus on the character Squeaky– We will fill out the handout titled Character Trait

based off of the character Squeaky

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Handout

EXAMPLE:Squeaky caring - takes care of Raymond