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IN MRS TILSCHER’S CLASS Carol Ann Duffy Word choice
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In Mrs Tilscher’s Class

Feb 24, 2016

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In Mrs Tilscher’s Class. Carol Ann Duffy. Word choice. Writers have to be economical with their words so they need to choose words which give the reader lots of information For instance – the word ‘shrieked’ gives more detail than ‘shouted’. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

IN MRS TILSCHER’S CLASSCarol Ann Duffy

Word choice

Page 2: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

Writers have to be economical with their words so they need to choose words which give the reader lots of information

For instance – the word ‘shrieked’ gives more detail than ‘shouted’

Page 3: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

Considering word choice is about thinking beyond the obvious meaning of a word in order to explore what it suggests

If a character leaves through a red door, what is the significance of this colour?

Often words meaning almost the same thing imply quite different things

Page 4: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

CONSIDER THE QUESTIONS: Should parents be allowed to smack

their children? Should parents be allowed to strike

their children? The questions are almost the same,

but the word 'strike' suggests something more violent and aggressive than 'smack', which has connotations of a more gentle action, a slap rather than a blow

Page 5: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

HOW MANY WAYS ARE THERE TO TELL THE SAME STORY?

Page 6: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

WORD CHOICE AND BIAS Words are very precise building blocks

that form the basis for all communicated ideas

People express themselves not only through what they say but also by how they say it

Some words are basic, others are luxuriously flamboyant, some reveal secondary thoughts, others betray hidden emotions

Page 7: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

Bias, in many forms, is not necessarily explicit in the words that have been used but can be recognized when seen in the fuller context that the words represent

Journalists use bias by manipulating single words in such a way that whole sentences' meanings are subtly changed (and sometimes not so subtly)

Page 8: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

THE FOLLOWING EXAMPLES ARE TAKEN FROM THE CONTEXT OF THE 2003 CONFLICT IN IRAQ: American Sources such as CNN have labeled

the conflict the ‘War In Iraq’ Arab sources such as Dar Al-Hayat regularly

call the conflict the ‘War On Iraq’

What is the effect of changing to word ‘in’ to the word ‘on’?

Page 9: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

The difference of a single word changes the entire thrust of the military campaign

‘in’ = fighting dissidents within the political borders of Iraq

‘on’ = aggression against the entire nation

Page 10: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

WORD CHOICE IN WRITING Writers use words choice for many

different reasons, e.g.:AtmosphereCharacterTheme

Often these things emerge by looking at word choice in a particular section (or even the whole poem), not just by considering an individual word

The effect is strengthened if it is accumulative

Page 11: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

ATMOSPHERE - DEFINITION Also called ‘mood’ It is the emotional feelings inspired by a work It is created by word choice, dialogue,

setting, and description Often the opening scene in a play or novel

establishes an atmosphere appropriate to the theme of the entire work

Page 12: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

FILL IN THE BLANKS TO CREATE A DIFFERENT ATMOSPHERE Sara skipped through the sun-dappled

woods. Birds sang sweetly from the lush, green trees and the ground felt soft beneath her feet.

Sara _______ through the ____________ woods. Birds ___________________ from the _______________ trees and the ground felt _______ beneath her feet.

Page 13: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class
Page 14: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class
Page 15: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

WORD CHOICE AND ATMOSPHERE Sara skipped through the sun-dappled

woods. Birds sang sweetly from the lush, green trees and the ground felt soft beneath her feet.

Sara crept through the storm-struck woods. Birds screeched menacingly from the bare, overgrown trees and the ground felt brittle beneath her feet.

Page 16: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

EXERCISE Expand on each of these sentences to make

them more vivid and alive:

- The house looked rundown- The tree had new buds- The cookies were burnt

Page 17: In Mrs  Tilscher’s  Class

Write down words that describe these common, everyday, over-used words with words that sound better:

- good - fat- happy - bad- hate - tired- love - sad