Reading maketh a full man . . . . . Speaking maketh a ready man . . . . . Writing maketh an exact man.

~~Sir Francis Bacon

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Due September 17, 2014 (FI#4)

GENERAL REMINDERS:
Essays should be typed. Be sure to follow essay format requirements 
KWOs, vocabulary words, Fix Its should be handwritten.


 

1)  Use a KWO you have already created and write a one paragraph essay. 
Remember to "talk through" your KWO. Tell the story to your Mom or Dad and then write it down. You will probably have more than one rough draft.

Staple your KWO to your final essay.

2)  Your final ESSAY must include the following dress-ups:
     ly

     ww
     b/c
     SV
     QA
Properly indicate your dress-ups.
3)  Fix It #4
4)  Vocabulary words - week #4



1) 2 KWOs and 2 ESSAYS  

     a) Use a KWO you have already created and write a one paragraph essay.
     b) Write a KWO and a one paragraph ESSAY using the Narwhal information handed out in class.
Staple your KWOs to your final essays.
2)  Your final ESSAYS must include these dress-ups:
     ly

     ww
     b/c
     SV
     QA
3)  Fix It #4
4)  Vocabulary words - week #4


1)  2 KWOs and 2 ESSAYS  

     a) Use a KWO you have already created and write a one paragraph essay.
     b) Write a KWO and a one paragraph ESSAY using the Narwhal information handed out in class.
Staple your KWOs & checklists to your final essays.
 
2)  Your final ESSAYS must include the following dress-ups:
     ly

     ww
     b/c
     asia
     SV
     QA
     T/C
3)   Fix It #4
4)  Vocabulary words - week #4



Fix Its: 
  • Cumulative adjectives will show up this week, and they don’t need commas. See Comma Rule #1 in the Appendix on page A-10.  
  • Interestingly, some adjectives need hyphens (-) between them. These are called compound adjectives. Two examples are “ten-story building” andnine-year-old girl.See if you can find one this week!  
Week 4Shape 
 Older now, Princess Dorinda had earned a name for beauty reaching into the furthest kingdoms. With the latest fada beauty spotperched high on her cheek, and her hair twisted into a powdered pompadour Princess Dorinda fancied herself quiet chic.  
  
Alas her beauty was flawed by her reputation for finickiness, and, dare I mention it, self-centeredness. Time and again king Morton had urged her to consider 1 or another young suitor, time and again she had refused all the eligible, young men.  
  
None are wealthy enough, or titled enough to suite her all too high Highness. During these reflections, King Morton shakes his head in abject despair dislodging his jewel encrusted crown.  
  
He wasn’t the only 1 clucking his tongue in consternation over princess Dorinda, lady Constance her elder companion since childhood had virtually given up on training her young charge in true, courtly behavior.  
  
  
pompadour:   
finickiness:  
 abject:  
 consternation: 

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