11th Grade Magnet American Literature

The Nitty Gritty #3

QUIZ: Rescheduled due to snow days: B-day, 3/7 and A-day 3/9

Vocabulary
  1. Adversary
  2. Alienate
  3. Artifice
  4. Coerce
  5. Craven
  6. Culinary
  7. Delete
  8. Demise
  9. Exhilarate
  10. Fallow
  11. Harass
  12. Inclement
  13. Muse
  14. Negligible
  15. Perpetuate
  16. Precedent
  17. Punitive
  18. Redress
  19. Sojourn
  20. Urbane
Refer to packet for assignment and the link below for online practice! / Grammar
(use your handout from NG #1 for details)
Semicolons
  • Joins two clauses without a coordinating conjunction
  • Can be used in a series with commas for clarity
Comma Rule #3
  • Independent clause joined together with a coordinating conjunction
  • Coordinating Conjunctions: FANBOYS
Comma Rule #5
  • Independent clause – use semicolon when no coordinating conjunction.
/ Literary Device Spotlight
IMAGERY
Sensory: auditory, visual, gustatory, tactile, olfactory, kinetic, organic
Categories: light, young, color, energy, bitter, harsh, strong, pleasant, cold
Contrast: light-dark; young-old; red-white; energy-apathy; bitter-sweet; harsh-soft; strong-weak; pleasant-repulsive; cold-warm

Online Vocabulary Practice:

The Nitty Gritty #2

Vocabulary
  1. adroit
  2. amicable
  3. averse
  4. belligerent
  5. benevolent
  6. cursory
  7. duplicity
  8. extol
  9. feasible
  10. grimace
  11. holocaust
  12. impervious
  13. impetus
  14. jeopardy
  15. meticulous
  16. nostalgia
  17. quintessence
  18. retrogress
  19. scrutinize
  20. tepid
Refer to packet for assignment and the link below for online practice! / Grammar
COMMAS!
Rule #1 – adverb dependent clauses
  1. When the Riverwood boys’ and girls’ basketball teams go to the state playoffs they will win!
Rule #7 – introductory prepositional phrases
  1. In his poem “Thanatopsis” William Cullen Bryant uses a combination of run on lines and caesuras.
Rule # 10 – items in a series
  1. Ernest Hemingway enjoyed fishing hunting fighting and writing novels and short stories.
/ Literary Device Spotlight
IRONY
(review and retest)
There are 3 main kinds (verbal, dramatic, situational)
Verbal: Saying something that you absolutely don’t mean, and implying that via intonation (often also called sarcasm)
Dramatic: When something happens in a play/show/song/etc… and only the audience knows (the characters don’t). EX: When you’re watching a movie and you know the detective’s partner is the killer, but he doesn’t.
Situational: When you expect something to happen and the opposite of what you expect to happen happens. EX: I would expect Alanis Morissette’s song “Ironic” to be full of irony, but it’s not full of irony, it’s just bad luck and coincidental situations.
List examples have we discussed in class:

Online Vocabulary Practice:

The Nitty Gritty

The Nitty Gritty #1

Vocabulary
  1. Adulterate
  2. Ambidextrous
  3. Augment
  4. Bereft
  5. Deploy
  6. Dour
  7. Fortitude
  8. Gape
  9. Gibe
  10. Guise
  11. Insidious
  12. Intimation
  13. Opulent
  14. Pliable
  15. Reiterate
  16. Stolid
  17. Tentative
  18. Unkempt
  19. Verbatim
  20. Warily
Refer to packet for assignment and the link below for online practice! / Grammar
Capitalization and Punctuation: Use your handout rules to fix any errors.
1.before you turn in your essay you must proofread it thoroughly
2.when i was a little kid i loved singing herman the worm
3.reading arthurmillers play the crucible our class learned about the witch trials in salemmassachusetts / Literary Device Spotlight
IRONY
There are 3 main kinds (verbal, dramatic, situational)
Verbal: Saying something that you absolutely don’t mean, and implying that via intonation (often also called sarcasm)
Dramatic: When something happens in a play/show/song/etc… and only the audience knows (the characters don’t). EX: When you’re watching a movie and you know the detective’s partner is the killer, but he doesn’t.
Situational: When you expect something to happen and the opposite of what you expect to happen happens. EX: I would expect Alanis Morissette’s song “Ironic” to be full of irony, but it’s not full of irony, it’s just bad luck and coincidental situations.
List examples have we discussed in class:

Online Vocabulary Practice: