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Good morning.
We’ll get started at 11.
Today’s agenda:
1. Continue with quotation work, practice for quiz tomorrow
2. Animal Farm Ch 5
3. Quiz tomorrow
4. HW Read Animal Farm Ch 6, make notes
Thursday – paragraph about Ch4-6
Friday – Pro D – no school for you
Monday - Animal Farm Ch 7
Next week – finish novel, begin essays
Tomorrow’s quiz – sample
Write a sentence that includes the quoted material for each, just like we did in class:
PRACTICE:
1. Old Major – “wise and benevolent”(1)
The animals respected Old Major, who was “wise and benevolent”(1), because he was a good leader who wanted the best for them.
2. Napoleon - “windmill was nonsense”(35)
3. the animals – “[s]ilent and terrified”(36)
4. Napoleon - “gruff soldierly style”(38)
Put your sentences in chat to share.
1. Napoleon thouogh "windmill was nonsense"(p?) so he disagreed to build it.
2. Napoleon thought that the "windmill was nonsense"(p?) so he disagreed about/with building it.
3. Napoleon believed that the "windmill was nonsense"(p?) because it was hard work and wasted time for the animals.
4. The animals were "silent and terrified"(36) when they went back into barn.
5. Napoleon didn't care about "windmill was nonsense"(35); actually, he only cared about the political power. RW Not a sentence
6. Napoleon never agreed to Snowball's plans; also, he said that plan of the ''windmill was nonsense''. (Chapter 5)
7. As old Major is a “wise and benevolent”(1) character, so all of the animals on the farm are respected respect old Major.
8. Napoleon doesn't didn’t want it to build because the "windmill was nonsense"(20).
articles-
verb tense-
difference between 3.5/6 & 5.5/6
9. The animals are were "silent and terrified"(36 )when they went to the zoo. What zoo? back into the barn.
10. Mr Pilkington - "easy-going gentleman-farmer"(24) XXX Not a sentence.
Mr Pilkington was a "easy-going gentleman-farmer"(24)
difference between 0/6 and 6/6
11. The animals are "silent and terrified" (36) when they heard a
gun shot from mr.Jones. 3/6
The animals were "silent and terrified" (36) when they heard a gun shot from Mr. Jones. 6/6
12. The animals were "silent and terrified" as they saw the dogs
chasing Snowball away from the barn. (chapter 5)
6/6
13. The animals kept "silent and terrified"(36) because they
were unbelieve what happened.
-couldn’t believe what happened.
-were incredulous about what happened.
14. the animals was "silent and terrified"(36) when Mr.
Pilkington and Frederick changed their tune. 0/6
The animals were "silent and terrified"(36) when Mr.
Pilkington and Frederick changed their tune. 4/6
changed their tune What do you mean? Be specific. Be clearer.
-changed what they were saying about the farm.
-decided to do business with the animals.
Don’t copy without quotations.
Chapter 4, "Frederick and Pilkington changed their tune and began to talk of the terrible wickedness....."
15. Napoleon - “gruff soldierly style”(38)
Napoleon presented himself to the other animals in a “gruff soldierly style”(38) in order to scare/intimidate them.
Napoleon acted and spoke in a “gruff soldierly style”(38) in order to intimidate the other animals.
16. Napoleon showed more "gruff soldierly style"(38) after Snowball was chased out of the farm because no one could argue/work/fight against him.
against – English (preposition)
against – Chinese (verb)
I against my friend. XXX common error
I push against my friend.
The salmon swim against the current of the river.
idiom: Maria is swimming upstream dealing with her mother.
swimming upstream – very difficult work or situation
Learning English for me is swimming upstream.
Homework – review how to use “ “
MY LECTURE NOTES
Chapter 5 Notes
Mollie increasingly disaffected, traitorous
consorting with Foxwood man, ribbons and sugar
disappears, defector
hard winter
pigs planners
Snowball and Napoleon, constant disagreement, different camps
Snowball brilliant speaker
Napoleon, sheep followers, interrupt Snowball's speeches
Snowball innovator, inventor
Napoleon- biding his time, scheming
Windmill, Snowball's dream for electricity, mechanization
Napoleon pees on plans- rare bit of humour in novel
animals- two factions, except Benjamin
Napoleon- train for defense
Snowball- incite rebellion elsewhere
vote about windmill- Snowball wins over animals with eloquence
Napoleon's dogs run off Snowball, the puppies from a few chapters ago
Napoleon suspends Sunday meetings, voting, only special committee
Animals only “salute the flag” and sing “Beasts of England” (36) –ritualistic, human-like behaviour
animals inarticulate or intimidated by dogs
Squealer sent to spin Napoleon and smear Snowball
discredit Snowball, call into question role in Battle of the Cowshed
raises specter of Mr. Jones coming back
Squealer persuades, dogs growl
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