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Reading 1. September 27. How Many Faces Do You See?. Strategies to Reading. Look for punctuation. Look at the next sentence. Look for signal words. Pay attention to suffixes and prefixes. QUIZ. Word Meaning. Look at the word. Find the suffixes and prefixes.
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Reading 1 September 27
Strategies to Reading • Look for punctuation. • Look at the next sentence. • Look for signal words. • Pay attention to suffixes and prefixes.
Word Meaning • Look at the word. • Find the suffixes and prefixes. • Guess the meaning of the word.
Irregular • I have been getting irregular sleep. I just can’t seem to get more than five hours! • Not normal • Normal • The wrong amount • Less than the usual amount
Rerecorded • I can’t believe you taped over my show. I rerecorded it. Please don’t tape over it again! a. the act of taping it b. the person who tapes it c. wanting to tape it d. having taped it again
Timeless • The watch was timeless. It would never go out of style. • A thing that has time • Having a lot of time • Not affected by time • Wrong time
Misfortune • It was a true misfortune to see so many homes destroyed due to Sandy. • Being lucky • Bad luck • The act of being lucky • A person who is lucky
Jokingly • “Awww, you stink,” I jokingly said. • A person who jokes • The act and manner of telling a joke • The manner of telling a joke • Telling a mean joke
Interstate • I will get on interstate 95 and head south. • A place where states meet • A small road in one state • A highway that goes across many states • A way people get places
Continuous • The continuous interruption bothered the students who were taking the test. • To continue to do something • To lack continuing • The manner of continuing • Not to continue
Prefixes • In- not • Un- not • Dis- not • Inter - between • Mis - wrong • Re – again; back indifferent unhappy disapprove intercontinental misunderstand replay
Noun Suffixes • -er - a person or thing that does something • -ist - a person or thing that does something • -or - a person or thing that does something • -tion – an action, idea or process • -ment– an action, idea or process player geologist calculator transportation acknowledgement
Adjective Suffixes • -al – connected to something • -an – connected to something • -ish– connected to something • -ous– connected to something • -less – without something • -ful – with something official American Spanish courageous colorless colorful
Verb Suffixes • -en – make or cause something to be • -ify– make or cause something to be • -ize– make or cause something to be given identify emphasize
Pg. 55 – Keith Folse • Un- not; negative • -logy / -ology – the science of • Bio- life; living • Geo- the earth • -ist a person who is trained or skilled in an area • -less adjective; lack of, not having
pg. 54 – Keith Folse Book • The science of earth • A person who is skilled in the science of earth • Not locked • The science of life • A person who is skilled in biology • Not invited • Not used • A person who plays the piano very well geology geologist unlocked biology biologist uninvited unused pianist
endless uncertain economist 9. Not having an end 10. Not certain 11. A person who knows a lot about the economy 12. Lack of color 13. A person who is skilled at typing 14. Not sold 15. The person in the pharmacy who gives you the medicine that your doctor prescribes for you 16. Lack of taste 17. A person who knows a great deal about x-rays and radiology 18. Not comfortable colorless typist unsold pharmacist tasteless radiologist uncomfortable
Names • Katherine Levian Howard • Katherine – means pure • Howard – an English name; comes from Hayward • Levian – a middle name given to me by my father’s side; Levian is the first born girl; Lee is the first born boy; family tradition • Katherine Howard – famous English queen…
PREVIEWpg 37-40 – Jessica Williams • What is the root? Do you see a word within the word that you know? • Is there a suffix or prefix? VIEW - root PRE - before
What do you think the reading is about? • Look at the pictures. • Look at the title. • Look at the subtitles. • Look at the tables. • Look at the captions.
What do you think the topic is? • The history of names • Names of famous people • How to say people’s names • Common names around the world • How people choose names
Reading Tip • While reading, look at the words. If you come across a word you don’t know, look to see if you recognize a word within the word. Use prefixes and suffixes to figure out the word meaning…
While Reading • Underline or write down words with prefixes and suffixes.
Where Does Your Name Come From? Naming customs are different around the world. For example, not everyone has the same number of names. In some countries, such as Indonesia, many people have have just one name. In most cultures, however, people have at least two names: a family name and a given name. Your given name is the name you receive when you are born. Your family name is the name you share with other people in your family.
Where Does Your Name Come From? gives more information Naming customs are different around the world. For example, not everyone has the same number of names. In some countries, such as Indonesia, many people have have just one name. In most cultures, however, people have at least two names: a family name and a given name. Your given name is the name you receive when you are born. Your family name is the name you share with other people in your family. shows differences; but
Where Does Your Name Come From? Naming customs are different around the world. For example, not everyone has the same number of names. In some countries, such as Indonesia, many people have have just one name. In most cultures, however, people have at least two names: a family name and a given name. Your given name is the name you receive when you are born. Your family name is the name you share with other people in your family. suffix
In English, the family name is often called the last name, and the given name is often called the first name. However, the order of the two names is not the same everywhere. For example, in many Asian countries, the family name is the first and the given name is second. When people from different cultures meet, sometimes they use the incorrect name. When this happens it can be very embarrassing. Italics are just as important as bold word. When reading, do not only pay attention to bold words. Notice the italics too! INCORRECT – not correct; IN - NOT
In English, the family name is often called the last name, and the given name is often called the first name. However, the order of the two names is not the same everywhere. For example, in many Asian countries, the family name is the first and the given name is second. When people from different cultures meet, sometimes they use the incorrect name. When this happens it can be very embarrassing.
What is the origin of family names? Many come from the name of a place, like London, or a job, such as Farmer or Shoemaker. In some countries, there are many different family names. In other countries, there are only a few. In South Korea, there are only about 250 family names. About half of all Koreans have one of the three most common family names – Kim, Park or Lee. This can cause problems, because most Koreans believe you should not marry a person with the same last name. This means Koreans must be careful whom they fall in love with!
What is the origin of family names? Many come from the name of a place, like London, or a job, such as Farmer or Shoemaker. In some countries, there are many different family names. In other countries, there are only a few. In South Korea, there are only about 250 family names. About half of all Koreans have one of the three most common family names – Kim, Park or Lee. This can cause problems, because most Koreans believe you should not marry a person with the same last name. This means Koreans must be careful whom they fall in love with! LIKE – shows an example
What is the origin of family names? Many come from the name of a place, like London, or a job, such as Farmer or Shoemaker. In some countries, there are many different family names. In other countries, there are only a few. In South Korea, there are only about 250 family names. About half of all Koreans have one of the three most common family names – Kim, Park or Lee. This can cause problems, because most Koreans believe you should not marry a person with the same last name. This means Koreans must be careful whom they fall in love with!
Create adjectives from nouns • Brazil - Brazilian • Korea – Korean • Poland – Polish • England – English • Albania – Albanian • Turkey – Turkish • Colombia – Colombian • Peru – Peruvian
There is generally no choice about family name, but there is much more choice about given names. Parents choose their child’s name from many different reasons. They may select a name that sounds beautiful or means something special. These names may have meaning like peace or strong. In some cultures, parents may pay money to a professional to help them find a good name. They want to find a name that will be lucky for their child. Italics here are EXAMPLES.
There is generally no choice about family name, but there is much more choice about given names. Parents choose their child’s name from many different reasons. They may select a name that sounds beautiful or means something special. These names may have meaning like peace or strong. In some cultures, parents may pay money to a professional to help them find a good name. They want to find a name that will be lucky for their child.
It is also common to give a child a name that is the same as the name of a parent or grandparent. Another common choice is to name the child after a famous religious person. For example, many Mexicans have names such as Jesus or Maria. Many Egyptians have the name of the Muslim leader, Muhammed. Some parents choose the name of a famous political leader. After the election of President Barack Obama, some parents in the United States and Kenya chose the name Barack. OUS – connected to something AL – connected to something
It is also common to give a child a name that is the same as the name of a parent or grandparent. Another common choice is to name the child after a famousreligious person. For example, many Mexicans have names such as Jesus or Maria. Many Egyptians have the name of the Muslim leader, Muhammed. Some parents choose the name of a famous politicalleader. After the election of President Barack Obama, some parents in the United States and Kenya chose the name Barack.
Sometimes names become popular for a short time. Parents may choose the name of a popular actor or singer. For example, the singer Madonna made that name popular in the 1980s. However, some parents want a name that is unique. They might invent a new name for their child. In China, many people have the same family name, so some parents invent new given names. They want their child to be a little different from other children. There are many different naming customs, and parents all over the world choose their children’s names very carefully. Your name may show your history and culture, or it may be unusual. It may be the name of a family member or a famous person. It may have a special meaning. Do you know why your parents chose your name?
Sometimes names become popular for a short time. Parents may choose the name of a popular actor or singer. For example, the singer Madonna made that name popular in the 1980s. However, some parents want a name that is unique. They might invent a new name for their child. In China, many people have the same family name, so some parents invent new given names. They want their child to be a little different from other children. There are many different naming customs, and parents all over the world choose their children’s names very carefully. Your name may show your history and culture, or it may be unusual. It may be the name of a family member or a famous person. It may have a special meaning. Do you know why your parents chose your name?
The Main Idea • Which sentence gives the main idea of the whole reading? • The order of names may be different in different countries • Parents may have many different ideas when they choose their child’s name • Names have an interesting history • There are many different naming customs around the world
Update • No class October 11 • Quiz October 4 on Lesson 1 prefix/suffixes • Due October 18 – Summary of Penguin Reader – more next week
Homework • Complete Keith Folse pages 75-76, 78-79, 81-82 • Read Jessica William’s page 44-46 and complete 46-47