Des explications sur le poème délivré par la jeune Amanda Gorman, âgée de 22 ans:
Easy Comics to read online, term
Thanksgiving, vidéo plus longue et détaillée pour 2nde euro
Obligatoire pour les euros, en bonus pour les curieux:
Construction de soi, voc, term LLCE
https://quizlet.com/_988rr2?x=1jqt&i=1b3hqx
On révise, on apprend, on mémorise, on écoute avec QUIZLET
Art to protest, voc, term LLCE
https://quizlet.com/_97c5zq?x=1jqt&i=1b3hqx
QUIZLET pour réviser
A London Year, 2ndes
texte à lire:13.a year in London
documents audio pour s’entraîner à bien prononcer:
intro:
Chinese New year:
the Boat Race:
Trooping the Colour
The London Marathon:
Kwanzaa, a video, pour tous
une autre célébration:
une autre vidéo des acteurs de THT, term LLCE
Fighting for change, a video, Term LLCE
Message de l’équipe de la série
Some literary terms, pour term LLCE
Suite à une demande de Tyler, ci-dessous quelques rappels utilses
Some literary terms
Very often writers highlight important words. They do this with:
- Alliteration – several words starting with the same letter or sound, for example, ‘bleared and black and blind’.
- Assonance – same vowel sound in different words. (‘far, star’)
- Cesura – a break or pause in the middle of a line of poetry.
- Enjambement or run-on lines – when there is no punctuation at the end of a line of verse and it runs straight on to the next line.
- Onomatopoeia – the effect when the sound of a word reflects its meaning, like ‘plash’.
- Personification – when something that is not human is referred to as if it is a person. The effect is usually to exaggerate some aspect of the topic.
- Repetition – repeated word or meaning.
- Rhyme – very similar to assonance; same vowel sound and final consonant, for example, ‘say’, ‘decay’.
Masculine rhyme – when the final syllable is stress, as in ‘say’ and ‘decay’.
Feminine rhyme – when the final syllable is not stressed, as in ‘growing’, ‘showing’.
- Rhythm – the musical beat of the line, with stressed and unstressed syllables (the stressed syllables will be the important ones).
They can also use comparisons:
- A metaphoris a figure of speech that is used to make a comparison between two things that aren’t alike but do have something in common.
- Unlike a simile, where two things are compared directly using “like” or “as”.
Fiche en PDF à imprimer ici: Some literary terms