PPT-The Landlady page 61 By R

Author : pamella-moone | Published Date : 2018-09-29

oa ld Dahl Standard RL 81 Standard 32 Evaluate the structural elements of the plot eg subplots parallel episodes climax the plots development and the way in

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The Landlady page 61 By R: Transcript


oa ld Dahl Standard RL 81 Standard 32 Evaluate the structural elements of the plot eg subplots parallel episodes climax the plots development and the way in which conflicts are or are not addressed and resolved . S without. . the family. by Ripley Algar. THE GUEST HOUSE YOU CHOSE FOR ME WAS VERY COMFORTABLE. THE LANDLADY MADE ME MOST WELCOME . AND I AM HAVING A LOVELY, RELAXING, TIME – SO DON’T WORRY. THE GARDEN ITSELF IS A BIT ON THE SMALL SIZE. paragraph. A how-to guide. What is it?. In an . analytical paragraph . a writer analyzes . a particular topic and breaks it down into . logically flowing sentences. .. This is the backbone of . how you respond “critically”. Idioms. The landlady appeared to be . slightly off her rocker.. “How . time does fly . from us all, doesn’t it, Mr. Wilkins?”. “. In one ear and out the other. , that’s me, Mr. Weaver.”. This dame was like a jack-in-the-box. He pressed the bell—and . Roald. Dahl . Important Concepts. Mood. : the feeling the reader gets based on the writer’s words and use of imagery. You can think of mood as the . atmosphere . that is created. . Foreshadowing. : a technique authors use to signal the reader that something is going to happen.. By Roald Dahl. Suspense. is the quality in a work of literature that makes the reader uncertain or tense about what is going to happen next. Before Reading:. Understand suspense and foreshadowing . Foreshadowing. The Landlady Pre-reading Characterisation Before reading the story, answer these questions about it. Work in pairs and devise what you think would be the likely or interesting answers to the questi V Chilli H Your Landlady’s Very Own Hot Recipe With Several Secret Ingredients. See If You Can Taste Them All. Served With Rice, Tortilla Chips, Sour Cream & Salsa. Veggie Option Is Made Wit Your guide to a level 4 mark…. 1. What . can the reader infer, using evidence from the text, about the two boys that are missing? What does this information lead the reader to believe concerning Billy's possible fate? (2 marks). Dahl. Point of View Analysis. Point of View. “The Landlady” is told from . . the . third person limited. point of view.. This means that the narrator is not a character in the story, but . the narrator has access to the thoughts and feelings of one character in the story. Issa. review. . For each question you missed, go back and write the explanation for why the right answer is right, and explain why the answer you chose is wrong.. #1 Theme. Theme just means “what the text was about”, similar to central or main idea. Often, the theme includes the “lesson” or “moral” of the story, but it would have to be a lesson that was demonstrated in the text. Inferred “lessons” (lessons we could infer but did not directly come from events in the story) would need to be excluded from your answer choice.. Day 3. Be a Detective!. Finding Examples of Foreshadowing. Foreshadowing. The use of clues or hints to suggest events that will occur later in the plot. . Foreshadowing is used to build suspense or anxiety in the reader or viewer. . Character.  . Protagonist: . e.. Rikki-Tikki-Tavi. Antagonists: . i. .. . Nag . & . Nagaina. , king cobras. Minor characters. : . l.. . Chua. , a . rat &. Coppersmith bird.  .  . Characterization . Vocabulary Terms . & the Use of Commas. Identify the comma rule that applies to each of the following sentences from “The Landlady.”. Page 73. But now, even in the darkness, he could see that the paint was peeling from the woodwork on their doors and windows and that the handsome, white .

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