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TODAY’S AGENDA Character name origins: Why are they appropriate? Act 1 & 2 Quiz Journal Entry #9 Notes: Iambic pentameter, blank verse, meter, etc. HOMEWORK: Outline completed by tomorrow at 11:59 pm The Chicken Marinara Melt from Subway is amazing, but it’s only $5 for a limited time!
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TODAY’S AGENDA Character name origins: Why are they appropriate? Act 1 & 2 Quiz Journal Entry #9 Notes: Iambic pentameter, blank verse, meter, etc. HOMEWORK:

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: TODAY’S AGENDA Character name origins: Why are they appropriate? Act 1 & 2 Quiz Journal Entry #9 Notes: Iambic pentameter, blank verse, meter, etc. HOMEWORK:

TODAY’S AGENDA

Character name origins: Why are they appropriate?

Act 1 & 2 Quiz Journal Entry #9 Notes: Iambic pentameter,

blank verse, meter, etc.

HOMEWORK: Outline completed by

tomorrow at 11:59 pm

The Chicken Marinara Melt from Subway is amazing, but it’s only $5 for a limited time!

Page 2: TODAY’S AGENDA Character name origins: Why are they appropriate? Act 1 & 2 Quiz Journal Entry #9 Notes: Iambic pentameter, blank verse, meter, etc. HOMEWORK:

CHARACTERIZATION

The techniques a writer uses to reveal the personality of characters to the reader. Direct Characterization: the writer makes direct statements

about a character's personality and tells what the character is like.

Indirect Characterization: the writer reveals information about a character and his personality through that character's thoughts, words, and actions, along with how other characters respond to that character, including what they think and say about him.

Page 3: TODAY’S AGENDA Character name origins: Why are they appropriate? Act 1 & 2 Quiz Journal Entry #9 Notes: Iambic pentameter, blank verse, meter, etc. HOMEWORK:

INDIRECT CHARACTERIZATION

Words: what the character says or what characters say about the character

Thoughts: what the character thinks How do we know what characters are thinking in R&J?

Actions: what the character does Interactions: how the character relates to others Names: often symbolic of a major character trait or

role There are several characters in Romeo & Juliet whose names

reveal something about their characterization. Like…

Page 4: TODAY’S AGENDA Character name origins: Why are they appropriate? Act 1 & 2 Quiz Journal Entry #9 Notes: Iambic pentameter, blank verse, meter, etc. HOMEWORK:

MERCUTIO

Named for the chemical element mercury, which has a very low melting temperature. The element is named for the god Mercury, the messenger of the gods.

What characteristics of the element and the god make the name a good it for Mercutio?

Page 5: TODAY’S AGENDA Character name origins: Why are they appropriate? Act 1 & 2 Quiz Journal Entry #9 Notes: Iambic pentameter, blank verse, meter, etc. HOMEWORK:

BENVOLIO

In Latin bene means “well” and volens means “wishing”; benevolent means “kindly or well-intentioned”

Why is this name appropriate for Benvolio?

Page 6: TODAY’S AGENDA Character name origins: Why are they appropriate? Act 1 & 2 Quiz Journal Entry #9 Notes: Iambic pentameter, blank verse, meter, etc. HOMEWORK:

TYBALT

He is named for a cat that is know for its slyness in the fable “Reynard the Fox.”

How is Tybalt like the cat he is named for?

Page 7: TODAY’S AGENDA Character name origins: Why are they appropriate? Act 1 & 2 Quiz Journal Entry #9 Notes: Iambic pentameter, blank verse, meter, etc. HOMEWORK:

PARIS

He shares his name with a Trojan prince in Homer’s epic the Illiad who persuades Helen to leaver her husband and marry him.

How is Paris in R&J like Paris in the Illiad?

Page 8: TODAY’S AGENDA Character name origins: Why are they appropriate? Act 1 & 2 Quiz Journal Entry #9 Notes: Iambic pentameter, blank verse, meter, etc. HOMEWORK:

JOURNAL ENTRY #9

What do you think of Romeo and Juliet’s love for each other?

Do you think it is true love or just infatuation? Explain…

Page 9: TODAY’S AGENDA Character name origins: Why are they appropriate? Act 1 & 2 Quiz Journal Entry #9 Notes: Iambic pentameter, blank verse, meter, etc. HOMEWORK:

IAMBIC PENTAMETER

IAMB: unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable EXAMPLE:

- / again

IAMBIC PENTAMETER: five verse feet with each foot an iamb (a total of ten syllables) EXAMPLE: - / - / - / - / - /

But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks?

Page 10: TODAY’S AGENDA Character name origins: Why are they appropriate? Act 1 & 2 Quiz Journal Entry #9 Notes: Iambic pentameter, blank verse, meter, etc. HOMEWORK:

BLANK VERSE: poems that do not rhyme but consist of iambic pentameter Shakespeare wrote many of his play in blank verse including this

example from Romeo and Juliet.

BLANK VERSE

Page 11: TODAY’S AGENDA Character name origins: Why are they appropriate? Act 1 & 2 Quiz Journal Entry #9 Notes: Iambic pentameter, blank verse, meter, etc. HOMEWORK:

TRY IT OUT…

Act I, Scene 5

My only love, sprung from my only hate!Too early seen unknown, and known too late!Prodigious birth of love it is to meThat I must love a loathed enemy.

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