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Sliva [168]
3 years ago
15

Select all that apply.

English
1 answer:
Ede4ka [16]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

bullets.....................

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Which sentence uses a gerund phrase as the subject of the sentence?
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Which phrase uses the rhetorical device pathos need help ASAP
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pathetic. Also called pathetic proof and emotional argument. Pathos is one of the three kinds of artistic proof in Aristotle's rhetorical theory. Parallelism uses words or phrases with a similar structure. "Like father, like son" is an example of a popular phrase demonstrating parallelism. a rhetorical device in which the writer breaks out of the flow of the writing to directly address a person or personified object.

Explanation:

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How old is Harriet in the poem sleeping by Katherine Weber?
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identify and explain four ways you can use context clues to determine the meanings of unfamiliar words that you encounter as you
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<span>Strategy 1: Use of Context

</span>One strategy is that of using sentence or passage-level context to infer the meaning of a word or phrase. Although some researchers feel that use of context, which is an “around-the-word” strategy, is not always reliable (that is, the context may not be rich enough to help students actually understand the meaning of a word or may lead them to a wrong conclusion), others have found that most new words are learned from context. Also, increasingly, standardized assessments require students to read a passage with an underlined word, answer a multiple choice question with four possible definitions of the word, and then answer<span> a second related</span><span> multiple choice question where the object is to provide evidence from the passage that supports the chosen definition.
</span>
<span>Strategy 2: Use of Word Parts

</span>Imagine a fifth grade class where a teacher can hold up a card with a word like abolitionist written on it, and within a minute small groups of students have figured out the meaning of the word—without the teacher uttering one sound.

This is not an imaginary classroom. Leslie Montgomery, who teaches in a high poverty public elementary school, regularly witnesses this phenomenon. Her students have learned the power of using the meanings of prefixes, roots, and suffixes (especially common Greek and Latin roots) to figure out the meanings of words.

As they talk through their reasoning, it is clear her students are developing “morphological awareness,” or understanding about the structure and origin of words. This skill can often seem like magic to kids, but is really sophisticated vocabulary knowledge that they need in order to learn at higher levels.

Strategy 3: Use of Reference Materials

The third word-learning strategy I want to suggest is that of using reference materials, which is a “beyond-the-word” technique.

Of course we need to teach students to use dictionaries, glossaries, and thesauruses to verify an inference and check the meaning of a word. But we can also teach students how to expand vocabulary into semantic networks by finding synonyms and antonyms in these reference materials as part of their word exploration.

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Because middle school students often just choose the shortest definition for a word, this type of investigation emphasized the importance of using multiple sources and considering the most accurate meaning in the context of the text.

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