1 / 17

Lesson 5 Prologue, Act I.I

Have SB books open to p260 Checking HW (Prologue) For completion!. Lesson 5 Prologue, Act I.I. Lesson Goals Read and comprehend plot lines of R+J Recognize evolution of English Language Understand and analyze syntax. Analogies Warm Up.

deacon
Download Presentation

Lesson 5 Prologue, Act I.I

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Have SB books open to p260 Checking HW (Prologue) For completion! Lesson 5Prologue, Act I.I Lesson Goals Read and comprehend plot lines of R+J Recognize evolution of English Language Understand and analyze syntax

  2. Analogies Warm Up • Notes on a separate sheet, please! Keep it with your R+J Packet to have a full study guide at the end of the unit. • Analogies help in understanding the connections made between words • The second word of an analogy helps describe the first given • For example: A carnival provides people entertainment, just as a textbook provides students with information

  3. Analogies Continued • Structured as such • Finger : Hand :: Leaf : Tree • Microwave : Heat :: Refrigerator : Cool

  4. Fill in the following analogiesWhat is the relationship between each set? • Comedy : Funny :: Tragedy : _________ • Brother : Sibling :: Father : __________ • Humiliated : Embarrassed ::Enraged : ______ • Sunscreen : Skin :: Armor : ________

  5. Prologue Review • Sonnet • Overview of plot • Uses inverted syntax (more on this!)

  6. Prologue Translation: No Fear Shakespeare!

  7. Inverted Syntax: R+J Packets • Normal sentence structure: • Subject noun + verb • Inverted sentence structure: • Verb + subject now • Examples: • Where is Romeo? Did you see him today? • Where is Romeo? Saw you him today? • Which is which?

  8. Springboard: Page 264 • Now that you have identified the difference, try to rewrite the inverted sentences to modern English • Pining over returned love is our hero Romeo. • A promise to stay has his love made.

  9. The Lingo of Shakespeare • Frequently, archaic language is used in the play that we have to translate to the modern English form • For example, Romeo says to Benvolio, “Farewell. Thou canst not teach me to forget.” • What does thou mean? • What does canst mean? • What in the world is Romeo saying?

  10. Word Chart So, what’s in common?

  11. Dun dun dun…Shakespearean Pronouns • What is a pronoun again? Words that can take The place of a noun! • Examples? I, you, he, she, it, we, you, they

  12. So, what is Benvolio saying here? • “Compare her face with some that I shall show, And I will make thee think thy swan a crow.” Pronoun Chart---Shakespeare Style 

  13. Now, put it all together: Act 1, Scene 1 • Open the Glencoe Textbooks (purple) to age 698 • Keep R+J Packets out: Vocab time! • PUN: a play on words which have two different meanings • Example: this paper is TEARABLE

  14. Scene 1 is Filled with Puns • The entire exchange between Sampson and Gregory (servants of the Capulets) is a pun cycle • This mean, word after word plays off on one another • As we read, try to identify the words that play off of one another to create the pun cycle (lines 1-52)

  15. Lines 54-98 • What’s up with the Prince? • Why is he so mad? • What have the families been doing to make him mad? • And what is his final warning?

  16. Lines 99-233 • What the Montague’s and their nephew discussing? • What is truly wrong with Romeo? • Why does Ms. Aiken hate Romeo so much right now? • What does Benvolio promise to do for Romeo?

  17. Homework • Study for the REAL Prologue Quiz • Translations • Sonnet Structure/Rules • Purpose • Alliteration • Analogies

More Related