Grade 5-6: Vocabulary Lesson for Tuesday, Week 9
This week's theme is: Writing
Word List 9
- imagery: mental pictures
- simile: two things being compared using like and as
- metaphor: a word meaning one kind of object or idea is used in place of another to suggest a similarity between them
- hyperbole: an exaggeration for effect and not meant to be taken literally
- theme: a topic or the central idea
- genre: a specific type of story or music, grouped according to the subject
- onomatopoeia: to use of words to imitate sounds
Tuesday Activities
- Use this site to create your own flashcards and quizzes. Create a free account to keep your cards.
- Connectors - Click on the link and type in your vocabulary words and their definitions in the three columns. Your definitions will be typed in column 2 and continue in column 3. Print out the sheet and cut it into the individual blocks. Keep the pieces in a Ziploc bag and try to put the connectors together during your travel time or free time at home.
- Create your own book with your vocabulary words. Click on the link to go to the site. Before you start, create an account. Read the instructions on how to use the site. Write a vocabulary word on each page and illustrate it if you wish. You can also add audio that you have recorded on your home computer. Save your book and let your friends and parents hear your work.
Other Help
If you need more information on your words, click on the link to use a on-line dictionary.
Use the daily activities to help you remember words that you learn each week. It is much easier to remember what the words mean if you do something with them and use them frequently in talking with your parents, family and friends.
Sample sentences:
A good writer uses imagery to keep up interest in his character.
Some authors use repeated imagery to set the mood.It is hard to find the right simile sometimes.
Poetry uses vivid similes to tell its storyA curtain of night is a metaphor.
He used the metaphor, a house of cards, to suggest what he thought of his brother's idea.Bill used this as an example of a hyperbole; "This book weighs a ton!"
The little boy did not know any better and took the hyperbole to be a true statement.The theme of the story I read was respect others who are not like you.
The question on the test asked to identify the theme of the poem.Fairy tales and non-fiction are different types of genre.
The library shelves books according to their genre.Baa Baa Black Sheep is an example of onomatopoeia.
Alka Seltzer had a commercial using onomatopoeia; "Plop, plop, Fizz, fizz, oh what a relief it is!"
For more vocabulary, reading and other language arts resources, please visit our interactive skillbuilders.