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EOC Practice Booklet Review

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Title: EOC Practice Booklet Review


1
EOC Practice Booklet Review
  • Take out your test booklet and your answer sheet
    and something to write with

2
3 - mood
  • Mood is what the reader feels while reading a
    scene or story. It is the atmosphere.

3
5 - alliteration
  • The repetition of usually initial consonant
    sounds in two or more neighboring words or
    syllables

4
6 7 bad questions
5
8 36 transition words
  • To Add and, again, and then, besides, equally
    important, finally, further, furthermore, nor,
    too, next, lastly, what's more, moreover, in
    addition, first (second, etc.)
  • To Compare whereas, but, yet, on the other hand,
    however, nevertheless, on the contrary, by
    comparison, where, compared to, up against,
    balanced against, but, although, conversely,
    meanwhile, after all, in contrast, although this
    may be true
  • To Prove because, for, since, for the same
    reason, obviously, evidently, furthermore,
    moreover, besides, indeed, in fact, in addition,
    in any case, that is
  • To Show Exception yet, still, however,
    nevertheless, in spite of, despite, of course,
    once in a while, sometimes

6
Transition words cont.
  • To Show Time immediately, thereafter, soon,
    after a few hours, finally, then, later,
    previously, formerly, first (second, etc.), next,
    and then
  • To Repeat in brief, as I have said, as I have
    noted, as has been noted
  • To Emphasize definitely, extremely, obviously,
    in fact, indeed, in any case, absolutely,
    positively, naturally, surprisingly, always,
    forever, perennially, eternally, never,
    emphatically, unquestionably, without a doubt,
    certainly, undeniably, without reservation

7
Transition words cont.
  • To Show Sequence first, second, third, A, B, C,
    next, then, following this, at this time, now, at
    this point, after, afterward, subsequently,
    finally, consequently, previously, before this,
    simultaneously, concurrently, thus, therefore,
    hence, next, and then, soon
  • To Give an Example for example, for instance, in
    this case, in another case, on this occasion, in
    this situation, take the case of, to demonstrate,
    to illustrate, as an illustration, to illustrate
  • To Summarize or Conclude in brief, on the whole,
    summing up, to conclude, in conclusion, as I have
    shown, as I have said, hence, therefore,
    accordingly, thus, as a result, consequently

8
13 - pronouns
  • He told Tom and (I or me?) to get ready.He told
    I to get ready? NOHe told me to get ready?
    YESTherefore, He told Tom and me to get ready.
  • If John and (I or me?) get married, we'll have
    two kids.If me get married? NOIf I get married?
    YESTherefore, If John and I get married, we'll
    have two kids.
  • Just between you and (I or me?), this is a bad
    idea.Because "between" needs to be followed by a
    plural, we'll use "we" and "us" to figure this
    out. Just between we? NOJust between us?
    YESJust between you and me, this is a bad idea.

9
Pronouns cont.
  • And whatever you do, please don't use a subject
    pronoun and object pronoun together.
  • He and I - correct "He and I are going to
    town."Him and me - correct "She told him and me
    the truth."Him and I - WRONGHe and me WRONG

10
14 33 Allusion/Illusion
  • Allusion means "an indirect reference to a
    person, event, or thing.
  • Illusion is a noun that means "false impression
    hallucination.

11
16 reliable sources
  • .net, .gov, .edu top .com
  • read the source

12
17, 25, 45 confusing words
  • Eccentric deviating from the usual or usual
    pattern of things
  • Nonchalant giving an effect of indifference
  • Curtail to cut off the end of

13
21 bad question
14
23 cause / effect
  • A cause is WHY something happens. 
  •  
  • An effect is WHAT happens.  As you read be a
    detective. 
  • Look for clue words, such as if,  then, because,
    since, and so. Clue words can sometimes signal
    causes and effects.  

15
27 shift in verb tense
  • For example shifting (or changing) from present
    to past verb tense

16
28 run-ons semi-colons
  • A RUN-ON SENTENCE has at least two parts, either
    one of which can stand by itself (in other words,
    two independent clauses), but the two parts have
    been smooshed together instead of being properly
    connected.

17
28 continued - Semi-colon
  • The first appropriate use of the semicolon is to
    connect two related sentences. The pattern looks
    like this
  • complete sentence complete sentence.
  • Here is an example
  • Grandma still rides her Harley motorcycle her
    toy poodle balances in a basket between the
    handlebars.

18
28 continued - Semi-colon
  • A semicolon can also team up with a
    transitionoften a conjunctive adverbto connect
    two sentences close in meaning. The pattern looks
    like this
  • complete sentence transition , complete
    sentence.
  • Check out this example
  • My father does not approve of his mother cruising
    around town on a Harley motorcycle however,
    Grandma has never cared what anyone thinks.

19
28 continued - Semi-colon
  • Finally, use the semicolon to avoid confusion
    when you have complicated lists of items. The
    pattern looks like this
  • item , more information item , more
    information and item , more
    information
  • Read the following example
  • On a Harley motorcycle, my grandmother and her
    poodle have traveled to Anchorage, Alaska San
    Francisco, California and Tijuana, Mexico.

20
28 continued - Semi-colon
  • Keep these three things in mind when you use a
    semicolon
  • The two main clauses that the semicolon joins
    should be closely related in meaning.
  • Don't capitalize the word that follows the
    semicolon unless that word is a proper noun, one
    that is always capitalized.
  • Limit your use of semicolons you should not
    scatter them wantonly throughout your writing.
    Semicolons should be saved for special occasions.

21
29 42 - parallelism
  • Parallel structure means using the same pattern
    of words to show that two or more ideas have the
    same level of importance. This can happen at the
    word, phrase, or clause level. The usual way to
    join parallel structures is with the use of
    coordinating conjunctions such as "and" or "or."

22
Parallelism examples
  • The production manager was asked to write his
    report quickly, accurately, and thoroughly.
  • The teacher said that he was a poor student
    because he waited until the last minute to study
    for the exam, completed his lab problems in a
    careless manner, and lacked motivation.

23
Parallelism examples
  • The salesman expected that he would present his
    product at the meeting, that there would be time
    for him to show his slide presentation, and that
    prospective buyers would ask him questions.

24
34 what does most specific mean
  • Specific precise detail
  • Which answer is most precise?

25
36 bad question
26
37 paraphrase
  • your own rendition of essential information and
    ideas expressed by someone else, presented in a
    new form.
  • one legitimate way (when accompanied by accurate
    documentation) to borrow from a source.
  • a more detailed restatement than a summary, which
    focuses concisely on a single main idea.

27
37 - summarize
  • Summarizing involves putting the main idea(s)
    into your own words, including only the main
    point(s). Once again, it is necessary to
    attribute summarized ideas to the original
    source. Summaries are significantly shorter than
    the original and take a broad overview of the
    source material.

28
38 dictionary entries
  • Last language entry is the original one the
    origin of the word.

29
40 organizational structure
  • Proposition support
  • Sequential order
  • Compare-contrast
  • Order of importance

30
43 mode
  • Informative
  • Narrative
  • Process analysis
  • Creative expression

31
44 foreign phrases
  • Alpha and omega beginning and end
  • Vox populi voice of the people popular
    sentiment
  • There will be no referendum since congress knows
    the vox populi would mean they wouldnt get
    re-elected.
  • E pluribus unum out of many, one
  • Non sequitur does not logically follow
  • You will do what I say because you are my wife!
    this is a non sequitur thought because it doesnt
    follow logic.

32
47 bad question
33
50 - apostrophes
  • Shows possession Mikes
  • Contractions dont

34
56 secondary sources
  • A primary source is a document or physical object
    which was written or created during the time
    under study. These sources were present during an
    experience or time period and offer an inside
    view of a particular event. Some types of primary
    sources include
  • ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS (excerpts or translations
    acceptable) Diaries, speeches, manuscripts,
    letters, interviews, news film footage,
    autobiographies, official records 
  • CREATIVE WORKS Poetry, drama, novels, music,
    art 
  • RELICS OR ARTIFACTS Pottery, furniture,
    clothing, buildings
  • A secondary source interprets and analyzes
    primary sources. These sources are one or more
    steps removed from the event. Secondary sources
    may have pictures, quotes or graphics of primary
    sources in them. Some types of secondary sources
    include
  • PUBLICATIONS Textbooks, magazine articles,
    histories, criticisms, commentaries,
    encyclopedias 

35
63 deductive vs. inductive reasoning
36
Deductive Reasoning In deductive, the conclusion
is based on one or more premises that state a
generalization. It usually states a
generalization or fact and ends with a conclusion
about something specific.
General
Premise All dogs are mammals. Conclusion My dog
Nico is a mammal.
  1. All women like chocolate.
  2. Mrs. Ward is a woman.
  3. Therefore, Mrs. Ward likes chocolate.

to
Specific
37
Inductive Reasoning Works the other way around.
Moves from premises that state specific facts and
observations to a broader generalization or
conclusion drawn from those premises.
Premise My dog has fur. Premise My friends
dogs have fur. Conclusion Therefore, all dogs
have fur.
Specific
  1. My mom likes chocolate.
  2. My sister likes chocolate.
  3. Therefore, all women like chocolate.

to
General
In inclusive arguments, the premises make it
likely the conclusion is true, but it is possible
for the conclusion to be false even if the
premises are true.
38
64 - Irony
  • Dramatic irony when the audience knows more about
    present or future circumstances than a character
    in the story.
  • Situational irony when there is a difference
    between what is expected or intended and what
    actually occurs.
  • Verbal irony - when the intended meaning of a
    statement differs from the meaning that the words
    appear to express.

39
You CAN do this!!
  • I know you can, you know you can!! Prove it!!
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