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Lesson Objectives At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.
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At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Lesson Objectives

At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Page 2: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

History of Limericks

Have you heard anything else about limericks?

Limericks named

after Irish town (with

a pub in which

limericks were told!)

Because silly

and

memorable,

repeated by

beggars and

working

classes in pubs

Even Shakespeare wrote them- Othello and King Lear

Page 3: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Limerick Rules-

Silly-but doesn’t always have to be 5 lines Lines 1, 2 and 5: 10 syllables Lines 3 and 4: 5 -7 syllables Lines 1, 2 and 5 rhyme

Page 4: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Examples: what’s the structure / pattern?

There was an Old Man with a beard,

Who said, 'It is just as I feared!Two Owls and a Hen,

Four Larks and a Wren,Have all built their nests in my

beard!

Page 5: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Looking at syllables in limericks

To get you started, write your first limerick simply by fitting syllables(beats) into the brackets. Use a bracket for each syllable –

  tree,

Who was horribly bored by a Bee;When they said, 'Does it buzz?'He replied, 'Yes, it does!''It's a regular brute of a Bee!'

    There was an Old Man in a { } Who { } { } { } { } { } { } { } {

} When { they } { said } { does } it } buzz ? } { He } { re } { plied } { } { } { } { Its } { a } { reg } { } { } { } { } {

}{ }

Page 6: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Use an example given to work out the ingredients of limericks.

1. How many lines are there? ______ 2. How many beats are there in each line?

Line A: _____ beatsLine B: _____ beatsLine C: _____ beats

Line D: _____ beats Line E: _____ beats 3. Which lines rhyme with which?

Lines ____, ____ and ____ rhyme. Lines ____ and ____ rhyme.

4. What subjects do limericks usually seem to be about?

Page 7: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

For each of these limericks make a list of the words that rhyme with each other.

In a castle that had a deep moat Lived a chicken a duck and a goat. They wanted to go out And wander about But they desperately needed a boat.   There once was a bear at the zoo Who always had something to do When it bored him, you know, to go to and fro, he reversed it and went fro and to.

Page 8: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Rhyme Pattern of Limericks

Rhyme Pattern or Scheme The rhyme scheme or rhyme

pattern is AABBA. A mosquito was heard to complain,

'A chemist has poisoned my brain!’The cause of his sorrowwas paradichloro-triphenyldichloroethane.

Page 9: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

LimericksLimericks consist of five lines.

Lines 1, 2, and 5 of Limericks have 7-10 syllables and rhyme with one another.

Lines 3 and 4 of Limericks have 5-7 syllables and also rhyme with each

other.

Limericks

Page 10: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

WHEN I GO FOR A WALK IN THE SUN,I CAN ASSURE YOU IT'S NOT ALWAYS FUN.AS THE FASTER I MOVE,IT IS EASY TO PROVETHAT PERSPIRATION,LIKE RIVERS,CAN RUN.

Page 11: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

How to write a Limerick

1)2)3)4)5)

7 – 10 syllables

5 – 7 syllables7 – 10 syllables

Page 12: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Task 4- complete this limerick

The school trip was a special occasionBut we never reached our destination

Sometimes Google can help you find a rhyming word : write in search line “words that rhyme with destination”

Page 13: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

For your ID point, consider your subject and themes

For example: words that rhyme with poverty

property properly fatherly somberly novelty robbery, slobbery, snobbery doddery, tottery, lottery foppery oddity, commodity

Page 14: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Task 1: Complete these limericks by using the list of words below.

A film actor dining in Kew Found a very large bug in his _____. Said the waiter, "Don't shout And wave it ______, Or the rest will be wanting one ___."   There once was a boy named Joe Who dropped a big brick on his ___ He asked, with a frown, "Will the swelling go _____?" And the doctor said, "Yes. I think___."

List of words: down, so, stew, about, toe, too.  

Page 15: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Task 2-Unscramble each of these two limericks and write down their lines in the correct order.

To scare off the critter Then a happy thought hit her She sat up in bed and just meowed Who was frightened and screamed very loud A mouse in her room woke Miss Doud   he awoke with a fright, Who dreamed of eating his shoe, and found that his dream had come true! in the middle of the night, There one was a man from Peru,  

Page 16: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Using non standard English to make a point that this person is isolated

‘Dis poetry is not Party Political, Not designed fe dose who are critical.’

Often used as a technique to say challenging or radical things or to emphasise that they are not part of the ‘wealthy world we know’.

Page 17: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Write!

Let’s try writing a limerick!

Page 18: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Share!

Let’s share some of our limericks!

Page 19: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

“Poetry: the best words in the best order.”

Samuel Taylor Coleridge (Poet)

(1772-1834)

Reflect!

To what extent do you find this statement to be true/false?

Page 20: At the end of this session we will have written a limerick.

Reflection in Learning Journal

I’ve used most of the skills learnt.

I’ve tried to use some of the skills learnt.

I’m not using the skills learnt as well as I could be.