Style Analysis. Diction

Similar documents
DICTION. The word DENOTATION means the literal, dictionary definition of a word.

Arkansas Learning Standards (Grade 12)

Arkansas Learning Standards (Grade 10)

1. alliteration (M) the repetition of a consonant sound at the beginning of nearby words

Language & Literature Comparative Commentary

Adjust oral language to audience and appropriately apply the rules of standard English

Glossary alliteration allusion analogy anaphora anecdote annotation antecedent antimetabole antithesis aphorism appositive archaic diction argument

CST/CAHSEE GRADE 9 ENGLISH-LANGUAGE ARTS (Blueprints adopted by the State Board of Education 10/02)

Correlation to Common Core State Standards Books A-F for Grade 5

Analysis of Diction and Syntax. Close reading strategy

Learning and Teaching English through the Bible: A Pictorial Approach BIBLE STUDY WORKBOOK PROSE

December 12th Book done : two best examples of section eight through twelve

English III Honors 2018 Summer Assignment

AP Language and Composition Summer Assignment, 2018

9 th Honors Language Arts SUMMER READING AND WRITING ASSIGNMENTS

AP LANGUAGE & COMPOSITION SUMMER ASSIGNMENT

Denotation and Connotation. The dictionary definition. The additional meaning a word may carry.

1. I can identify, analyze, and evaluate the characteristics of short stories and novels.

Mr. Cunningham s Expository text

CW5.7 Historical Interpretation: How did Lincoln s reasons for fighting the war change over time? (p. 1 of 3)

District of Columbia Standards (Grade 9)

Please follow Adler s recommended method of annotating. ************************************************************************************

Sixth Grade 101 LA Facts to Know

AP ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND COMPOSITION 2007 SCORING GUIDELINES (Form B)

English II STAAR EOC Review

School District of Springfield Township

AP English Language Summer Reading

12th Grade Language Arts Pacing Guide SLEs in red are the 2007 ELA Framework Revisions.

Lake Elsinore Unified School District Curriculum Guide & Benchmark Assessment Schedule English 10

A.P. Language and Composition Rhetorical Terms & Glossary

DIDLS: The Key to Tone

Correlated to: Massachusetts English Language Arts Curriculum Framework with May 2004 Supplement (Grades 5-8)

Comparative Rhetorical Analysis

Rhetoric - The Basics

Grade 6 Overview texts texts texts fiction nonfiction drama texts author s craft texts revise edit author s craft voice Standard American English

Grade 4 Overview texts texts texts fiction nonfiction drama texts text graphic features text audiences revise edit voice Standard American English

Rhetorical Devices Multiple Choice Test Questions

GCPS Freshman Language Arts Instructional Calendar

Student Performance Q&A:

ENGLISH 2201: Essays and Prose

UNIT PLAN. Subject Area: English IV Unit #: 4 Unit Name: Seventeenth Century Unit. Big Idea/Theme: The Seventeenth Century focuses on carpe diem.

This is a template or graphic organizer that explains the process of writing a timed analysis essay for the AP Language and Composition exam.

Language Arts Study Guide Week 1, 8, 15, 22, 29

Language Paper 1 Knowledge Organiser

Cite. Infer. to determine the meaning of something by applying background knowledge to evidence found in a text.

The Three Elements of Persuasion: Ethos, Logos, Pathos

Correlation --- The Manitoba English Language Arts: A Foundation for Implementation to Scholastic Stepping Up with Literacy Place

Human beings argue: To justify what they do and think, both to themselves and to their audience. To possibly solve problems and make decisions

Standard 2: Listening The student shall demonstrate effective listening skills in formal and informal situations to facilitate communication

Advanced Placement English Language and Composition 2018 Summer Assignment

Western School of Technology and Environmental Science First Quarter Reading Assignment ENGLISH 10 GT

AP LANGUAGE & COMPOSITION SUMMER PROJECT

In years 3, 4 and 5 children are expected to: Read daily at home. Bring library books back to school every week. If the library book is unfinished,

SECTION EIGHT THROUGH TWELVE

ENGLISH HOME LANGUAGE

6 th Grade ELA Post-Test Study Guide Semester One

Literature Cite the textual evidence that most strongly supports an analysis of what the text says explicitly

Technical Writing Style

DICTION. The boy surveyed the class, congratulating himself for snatching the highest grade on the test.

THE LONGMAN WRITER CHAPTER 11: DESCRIPTION ESSAY

Grade 9 and 10 FSA Question Stem Samples

EIGHTH GRADE RELIGION

Rubrics & Checklists

Allusion brief, often direct reference to a person, place, event, work of art, literature, or music which the author assumes the reader will recognize

Similarities in Amy Tans Two Kinds

Pride is a wonderful, terrible thing, a seed that bears two vines, life and death ( ).

Rhetorical Analysis. Part 2 (Post Essay)

FRANKLIN-SIMPSON HIGH SCHOOL

ILAR Grade 7. September. Reading

Part 1: SOAPSTone. Strategies for Rhetorical Analysis

The BOOK BAND GUIDE. Find the right book, for the right child, at the right time.

Cambridge Pre-U 9787 Classical Greek June 2010 Principal Examiner Report for Teachers

Grade 9 Final Exam Review. June 2017

Processing Skills Connections English Language Arts - Social Studies

AP English Literature and Composition

Eleventh Grade Language Arts Curriculum Pacing Guide

AP Language Summer Reading Assignment Brittain Carolina High School

ENGLISH 1201: Essays and Prose

5. Aside a dramatic device in which a character makes a short speech intended for the audience but not heard by the other characters on stage

Transactional Writing Revision Sheet Type, Audience and Purpose (TAP) Type Purpose: Audience Decode the question Planning

Author s Purpose. Example: David McCullough s purpose for writing The Johnstown Flood is to inform readers of a natural phenomenon that made history.

Honors 10 English Final Exam Study Guide

Essay Analysis. English 621. Purpose. Audience. Subject Matter. The purpose is what the essay tries to accomplish.

Effective Sentence Structure

A Short Guide to Writing about Science

ENGLISH IVAP. (A) compare and contrast works of literature that materials; and (5) Reading/Comprehension of Literary

The Literary Essay An analysis of the literary devices used in Night.

Diction & Tone. An Introduction

Literary Terms. A character is a person or an animal that takes part in the action of a literary work.

ELA, GRADE 8 Sixth Six Weeks. Introduction to the patterns in William Shakespeare s plays and sonnets as well as identifying Archetypes in his works

Advanced Placement English Language and Composition Mrs. Ellie Kenworthy 2016 Summer Reading Assignment

Program Title: SpringBoard English Language Arts

MIDTERM EXAMINATION Spring 2010

The Scarlet Ibis. Pride is a wonderful, terrible thing, a seed that bears two vines, life and death (172, Holt).

PART 2: INTEGRATING QUOTATIONS

BR 4-Tu. Before the year ends, I will visit my friends Gerry and Beth in San Francisco, California.

ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS

Resources Vocabulary. oral readings from literary and informational texts. barriers to listening and generate methods to overcome them

Writing the Annotated Bibliography for English/World History Synthesis Essay

o Mandatory Reading 1: In Cold Blood- Truman Capote

Transcription:

Style Analysis Diction

Definition: Diction All of the following terms are used interchangeably and all mean the author s word choice Diction Language Figurative Language Figures of Speech

AP HINT Word choice is the most powerful element of style for you to understand. If the directions in the prompt do not give you any specific techniques to analyze, always address diction---you won t be wrong.

Word Choice Many words in our language have strong connotations, and authors use them on purpose to elicit certain responses from the reader.

Denotation This means the literal, dictionary definition of a word. Example: Plump and Obese Both of these words share the same definition. (these are synonyms)

Connotation The implied or suggested meaning attached to a word, the emotional tag that goes along with a word.

Example: Connotation The word plump has the connotation of being pleasantly fat, almost cutely overweight. Its connotation describes women more often than men. It is this extra emotional feeling that shows how we use the word.

Example: Connotation The word obese, often used by medical personnel, has a more technical connotation. It carries a less emotional, more scientific emotional tag. Both plump and obese have the same literal definition, but the connotations are different.

Connotation Connotation is important because it shows differences between synonyms and illustrates ways in which we use a word.

Example: Strong Connotative Diction The boy surveyed the class, congratulating himself for snatching the highest grade on the test.

Process Once you identify an author s diction, you must analyze it. This means that you write commentary about it. You must discuss the connotation of the word or phrase to do a good job of diction analysis.

Diction Analysis Word: Surveyed Connotation: Conveys the idea of someone looking around as if he were a king gazing down on lesser beings.

Your Turn Word: Connotation: snatching

General Idea So far, you have covered the general idea behind diction analysis. The next step is to practice identifying diction samples in an actual passage.

The Diction Paragraph To write a topic sentence for the diction paragraph, you would include the word diction and give a focus for the paragraph. Sample: The author s diction heightens the power and force behind the snake as it responds to the man, first placidly, then aggressively.

Style and Situation If you are the type of person who likes definite answers, style can be a rather baffling concept. How do you know whether particular words, sentences, or figures of speech are a good choice? The answer is always the same: It Depends

Style and Situation What does it depend on.or Upon what does it depend? (which one will you write?) The answer is that whether a particular word, phrase, sentence, or figure of speech is right depends on the particular writing situation, or situational appropriateness.

Style and Situation Consider the situation where you might be required to write an analytical paper for a history class: The need to write comes from the inquiry you are engaged in. You, the historian, are the writer. You may think that the audience for your paper is only the teacher, but

Style and Jargon Specialized vocabularies that readers expect to encounter in the discourse community s documents an that writers new to the community are expected to know and use. Jargon is not a bad thing when used correctly: Don t use big words with no good reason When my cat expired, I waxed lachrymose. Simplify! Don t try to use jargon if you aren t sure what the terms mean (don t name a trope or scheme if you aren t sure better to describe the passage instead.

What about You and I? Is it okay to use first-person, second-person, and contractions? The answer depends on the situation. For most academic papers, the use of firstperson is not appropriate. In most academic papers it is also not appropriate to refer directly to the reader as you.

What about You and I? For most academic papers, the use of first-person is not appropriate because the focus in this kind of writing is on the subject rather than on the person writing about the subject. Also, it is not appropriate of writers to refer directly to their readers as you. However, if the situation calls for the writer to offer a personal response, it would be inappropriate to NOT write in first person. Similarly, if the situation calls for an open letter on a controversial issue to congressional reps working on legislation to address it, then it would be nearly impossible for the writer to produce a successful letter that did not refer to the representatives directly as you.

Why can t I use Contractions? You CAN, if it is appropriate for the writing situation. In most formal, academic papers, and in business-oriented letters and reports, writers generally avoid contractions. In informal papers and personal letters, writers should feel free to use the same kind of words they would use if they were speaking their audience face to face. Use a contraction based on your intention as a writer and your relationship to the reader.

Style and Passive Voice Active Voice: Doer Action Receiver The lab technician filtered the solution. Passive Voice: Receiver Action By Doer The solution was filtered by the lab technician. What are three differences between active and passive voice? But should you ever use passive voice? Avoiding passive voice entirely is hard. In fact, it can t be done. (notice the passive voice here).

Sentences, Words, Figures Three broad categories of style help writers to analyze the style of a text and to make their own stylistic choices. Every choice we make potentially affects the meaning of a composition. Sentences: Grammatical type, placement of details, variety Words: Level of elaborateness and formality, difficulty, technicality Figures: Schemes and tropes, figurative language

Sentences: Sentences can be classified in many ways, and it s helpful to consider the potential effect a particular type of sentence might have on a reader in a certain situation. Simple Sentence: Has a single independent clause. Abraham Lincoln struggled to save the Union. Within its single clause, a simple sentence can have a compound subject, and compound verb, or both. Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson struggled to save the Union. Abraham Lincoln struggled to save the Union and persevered.

Sentences: Compound Sentence: Has two clauses, each of which could exist as a simple sentence if you removed the conjunction connecting them. Abraham Lincoln struggled to save the Union, and Andrew Johnson assisted him. Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson struggled to save the Union and persevered, but the leaders of the Confederacy insisted that the rights of the states were more important than the maintenance of the Union. Complex Sentence: Has two clauses, one independent and at least one subordinate to the main clause. When the leaders of the Confederacy insisted that the rights of the states were more important than the maintenance of the Union, Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson struggled to save the Union and persevered.

Sentences: Compound-complex: Has the defining features of both a compound sentence and a complex sentence. When the leaders of the Confederacy insisted that the rights of the states were more important than the maintenance of the Union, Abraham Lincoln struggled to save the Union and persevered, and Andrew Johnson assisted him. Why should you be concerned with whether a sentence is simple, compound, complex, or compound-complex when you are analyzing someone else s writing or planning your own?

Sentences: Function grows out of form. When you need to make a succinct point, often a short, simple sentence will do so effectively. A short, simple sentence can suggest to a reader that you are in control, that you want to make a strong point. Why might you use a compound sentence in your writing? If you are trying to show how ideas are balanced and related in terms of equal importance, a compound sentence can convey that to the reader. Several compound sentences in a row can tell the reader that you are the kind of person who takes a balanced view of challenging issues.

Sentences: If you want to show more complicated relationships between ideas, then complex and compound-complex sentences can communicate the intricacies of your thinking.

Sentences: A second method of analyzing sentences looks at them in terms of another important structural distinction: Loose sentences or Periodic Sentences. Sentences vary along the loose-periodic continuum according to how they incorporate extra details in relation to basic sentence elements. Here is a sentence with just two basic elements: Abraham Lincoln wept. A loose sentence is a basic sentence with details added immediately at the end of the basic sentence elements.

Sentences: Loose sentence: Abraham Lincoln wept, fearing that the Union would not survive if the southern states seceded. Abraham Lincoln wept (basic elements), fearing that the Union would not survive if the southern states seceded (added details).

Sentences: Periodic Sentence: A sentence in which additional details are placed in one of two positions, either before the basic sentence elements or in the middle of them. Period sentence in which details are placed before the basic sentence elements: Alone in his study, lost in somber thoughts about his beloved country, dejected but not broken in spirit, Abraham Lincoln wept.

Sentences: Here is a periodic sentence that results from placing additional material in the middle fo the basic sentence elements: Abraham Lincoln, alone in his study, lost in somber thoughts about his beloved country, dejected but not broken in spirit, wept.

Sentences: You can achieve sentence variety by writing sentences that move along a loose-periodic continuum. This sentence tends towards which one? Loose or Periodic? Abraham Lincoln considered the Union an inviolable, almost eternally inspired, concept. This one tends towards loose.

Sentences: You can achieve sentence variety by writing sentences that move along a loose-periodic continuum. This sentence tends towards which one? Loose or Periodic? Abraham Lincoln, a self-taught philosopher, a political scientist even before there was such a field, considered the Union an inviolable, almost eternally inspired, concept. This one tends towards periodic. Details are in the middle of the basic elements.

Sentences: Writers use loose and periodic sentences to effect changes in meaning. Readers use them to understand meaning more clearly. Recognizing and creating loose and periodic sentences enable the reader and the writer to make wise decisions about varying sentence structure for emphasis. The structure of the sentence also affects the pacing of a text. A loose sentence moves quickly, and a periodic sentence works with delay.

Which is is: Loose or Periodic? Read the sentence from Booker T. Washington s Up From Slavery. In order to defend and protect the women and children who were left on the plantation when the white males went to war, the slaves would lay down their lives. Periodic Rewrite this sentence in a couple ways, making it more loose and more periodic. How do the changes affect the tone, purpose, and the ethos of the speaker?