LNN.


A PREPOSITION is a word that shows the relationship between a noun or pronoun and some other word in the sentence. It is ALWAYS part of a phrase.
TIME, DIRECTION, LOCATION.

Over the hills and through the woods to Grandmother’s house we go on a unicorn.”

“Prepositions! 10/25.”  DO NOT USE THE SAME WORD TWICE! Copy the boldfaced underlined parts.

  1. My llama was lying ____ the couch.
  2. The llama ____ the counter was rude.
  3. The llama flew the chopper ____ the clouds.
  4. The llama who sits ____me is annoying.
  5. The llama ____ the bridge is a troll.
  6. The llama looked ___ the window.
  7. The llama bought a can ___ beans.
  8. The llama limped ___ the hill.
  9. (2) The llama went ____ me ___ the store.

“Vocab, 10/25.” heedless, haggle, dawdle, sundry, glutton, begrudge, stupefy, compliant, teem, privy, bounty

  1. _____
  2. _____
  3. _____
  4. _____
  5. _____
  6. The root of this word meant “goodness.”
  7. The root of this word meant “to be struck senseless.”
  8. The root of this word meant “separate or distinct.”
  9. The root of this word meant “to complete” (like a task).
  10. The root of this word meant “private.”
  11. The root of this word meant “to complain.”
  12. The root of this word meant “daily.”
  13. (3) The path to school ____(ed) with dangers, but he was ____ of it all and _____(ed) so much that he was late.

TMA Mini Research

  • Each group makes one slide. Share it with all group members and ME.
  • Each person is responsible for two SENTENCES.
    • what is it, medieval context use, modern uses, other interesting info, etc.
  • Each Person has to use a different source of information.
  • Title/Term
  • Two Pics w/source credit (see below for format or try EZBib or similar.)
  • Credit for sources of information.
  • Names and Period
  • We will present tomorrow. Each person will read their part aloud.  Homework if you don’t finish.

TERMS:  Walpurgis Night, Smut Rye, Smallpox, Comfrey, Shrovetide (Tuesday), Birthwort Root, Vellum

Update: Citations on a Second Slide: A PAGE ON A WEB SITE

For an individual page on a Web site, list the author or alias if known, followed by an indication of the specific page or article being referenced. Usually, the title of the page or article appears in a header at the top of the page. Follow this with the information covered above for entire Web sites. If the publisher is the same as the website name, only list it once.

Lundman, Susan. “How to Make Vegetarian Chili.” eHow, www.ehow.com/how_10727_make-vegetarian-chili.html. Accessed 6 July 2015.

“Athlete’s Foot – Topic Overview.” WebMD, 25 Sept. 2014, www.webmd.com/skin-problems-and-treatments/tc/athletes-foot-topic-overview.