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PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1 Category 2 Category 3 Category 4 10 10 10 10 20 20 20 20 30 30 30 30 40 40 40 40 50 50 50 50
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PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

Dec 17, 2015

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Alyson Mathews
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Page 1: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

PowerPoint JeopardyCategory 1 Category 2 Category 3 Category 4

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Page 2: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

Please give definitions to Comma Splices and

Fused Sentences and explain their differences.

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Page 3: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

Please give three examples of sentence fragments.

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Please give definitions to Dangling Modifier

and Misplace Modifier and explain their differences.

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Please give two examples to explain what

Agreement Problems are.

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Page 6: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

When purchasing a cellular phone, the wide variety of calling plans and features overwhelms many people.

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Page 7: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

We almost ate all of the Thanksgiving turkey.

A small book sat on the desk that Sarah had read.

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Page 8: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

William Faulkner’s A Rose for Emily is talking about the story of a woman named Emily who was from a southern noble family.

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Page 9: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

Howard’s first film he directed by himself was “Helen’s Angels”, it was a film about an air battle.

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Page 10: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

A Rose for Emily” is a story about Miss Emily Grierson by William Faulkner.

A rose for Emily is a celebrated article written by William Faulkner

Emily’s revenge is also violent which Homer Barron’s corpse

rotted and covered in dust in her room.

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Page 11: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

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There is an estimated 29,000 women living in our city.

Each of the crew members were injured during the storm.

Neither apples or oranges are good vitamin sources.

Page 12: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

Howard Hughes is the central figure in the film “The Aviator”; he was a careerist who wasn’t willing to inherit his dead father’s business—his father was the inventor of a drill bit.

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Page 13: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

Fetterly has commented on his behaviour as well “Satoris’ remission of Emily’s taxes

allowed or enabled of the fact that a lady is not soncisdered to be and hence not allowed or

enabled to be, economical independent” (455.)

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Page 14: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

But since the word “lady” appeared so many times, I was wondering is it really true that

Emily is a victim or Fetterley is just persuading us that women should stand up

and rebel the men by victimizing Emily.

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Page 15: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

Not with a physically violence, what her father oppress Emily is his

mental pressure.

I think it is brilliant how she viewed this story and built her argument

from the feminist perspective, but I do not agree that this story is limited to only such interpretation and angle

of perspective.

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Page 16: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

After her father died, Emily falls in love with Homer Barron, when Homer Barron is about to leave her, everyone in town predicts that she will commit suicide, she poisons Barron and hides her corpse in her bedroom.

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Page 17: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

However, the idea of how the stereotype which exists in an orderly civilization can induce violence against itself; how order can induce chaos can be also further interpreted.

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Page 18: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

1.When one finishes such a great book, you will have a sense of achievement.

2.One should sift the flour before they make the pie.

3.She delivered the blueprints, inspected the foundation, wrote her report, and takes the afternoon off.

4.He delivered the plans for the apartment complex, and the building site was also inspected by him.

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Page 19: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

For the reason that they thought Emily as a communal property, and

also for the reason that people thought the Friersons hold hemselves too high, they used a high standard to

see and to measure this woman.

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Page 20: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

This article is a critical analysis of the story “A Rose for Emily” written by Judith Fetterley; via the feminist perspective to reveal the grotesqueness of conventional social behaviour and sexual stereotype in the story.

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Page 21: PowerPoint Jeopardy Category 1Category 2Category 3Category 4 10 20 30 40 50.

Using a feminist perspective to analyze “A Rose for Emily”, Fetterley started off with persuading the readers that Emily was being oppressed by the town folks and her father especially, she ended up revenge them by killing Homer Barron. By using such technique, the readers will definitely fall for the side that Emily is the victim. Indeed, Emily is the victim by being a “lady”, she is also a murderer.

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