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Romeo and Juliet

Romeo and Juliet . Freshman A . Annotate For Thematic Ideas . Love. True love? Innocent love? Too young to love? Love vs. lust? Love vs. passion? Love. Hate. Causes of hate? Does hate cause violence or does violence cause hate? Can love cause hate?

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Romeo and Juliet

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  1. Romeo and Juliet Freshman A

  2. Annotate For Thematic Ideas • Love. True love? Innocent love? Too young to love? Love vs. lust? Love vs. passion? Love. • Hate. Causes of hate? Does hate cause violence or does violence cause hate? Can love cause hate? • Forbidden. Is it human nature to want something more because it is forbidden or kept away from us? • Fate. Coincidences, destiny, fate? • Personal Connection: What variables influence your decisions and guide you toward making sound choices? How do you know if it is a sound choice?

  3. Annotate for Structure • Cause and Effect Scenarios • What is the outcome of these choices? • Examine both character choices and author choices! • The structure of text to develop and refine the author’s intention • Why would the author choose this particular structure of sentences, paragraphs, scenes, and acts? • How does this organizational structure support what the central theme or idea? • Chronological Order • Why does the author reveal the information in this order? • Compare / Contrast • Usually a persuasive strategy. Do the characters use this strategy to reason or influence? • Parallel Structure • Using the same pattern of words to show that two or more ideas have the same level of importance

  4. Annotate for Literary Devices/ Figures of Speech • Allusion – makes reference to something known • Alliteration -- repetition of a particular sound • Personification – human characteristics to non-human things • Metaphor – comparison of two unlike things (Extended metaphor) • Simile – comparison using like or as • Foreshadowing – hints towards a certain plot development • Soliloquy – character speaks to oneself • Asides – character speaks to the audience • Pun -- form of word play which suggests two or more meanings, often used with similar sounding words

  5. Annotate for Shakespeare’s Style • Sonnet -- 14 lines with a set rhyme scheme and a fixed rhythm called ' iambic pentameter' • Iambic pentameter – Five unaccented syllables alternate with five accented syllables • di-dum/di-dum/di-dum/di-dum/di-dum • There are five iambs to a line • This helps to create a sense of harmony and acts to link the ideas expressed in the sonnet. • “But soft!/ What light/ through yon/der win/dow breaks?”  • End rhyme -- rhyme that occurs in the last syllables of verses • I'll look to like if looking liking move, But no more deep will I endart mine eye, Than your consent gives strength to make it fly.

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