5th Grade Spelling

Unit 4 Lesson 19

1. lately

2. settlement

3. watchful

4. countless

5. steadily

6. closeness

7. calmly

8. government

9. agreement

10. cloudiness

11. delightful

12. noisily

13. tardiness

14. forgetful

15. forgiveness

16. harmless

17. enjoyment

18. appointment

19. effortless

20. plentiful

21. oil

22. modern

23. fun

24. catch

25. business

Challenge Words

1. suspenseful

2. merciless

3. seriousness

4. contentment

5. suspiciously

Darnell Rock Reporting
Realistic Fiction

Big Idea

Everyone has a story to tell.

Essential Question

How do you persuade people to support your ideas?

Target Vocabulary

issue - a subject or problem that people think and talk about

deteriorating - becoming worse; falling apart

dependent - relying on others

exception - something that does not fit into a general rule

granted - given in an official way

effective - successful and achieves desired results

urge - to try to persuade strongly

violations - acts that show disrespect or break the rules

ordinance - a law or rule made by authorities

minimum - the very least

Comprehension
Target Skill

Persuasion - the author of a persuasive text might state a goal and give reasons why the goal is important. The author might also give facts and examples to support each reason.

Target Strategy

Summarize - to briefly tell the important parts of a text in your own words. Summarizing an argument helps readers understand how the author's reasons support the goal.

Vocabulary Strategies

Greek and Latin Suffixes -ism, -st, -able, -ible - a suffix is affix attached to the end of a base word or root that changes the meaning of the word. Two common Greek suffixes are -ism (belief in something) and -ist (one who is or does). Common Latin suffixes include -able and -ible (capable or worthy of an action).

Grammar

More Kinds of Pronouns - an indefinite pronoun refers to a person or thing that is not identified. A possessive pronoun replaces a possessive noun and shows ownership. Words such as my, your, his, her, its, our, their, mine, yours, and theirs are possessive pronouns. An interrogative pronoun begins questions. The words who, what, and which are interrogative pronouns.