Title: Messages by the Mile By: Margery Facklam
1Messages by the MileBy Margery Facklam
Open Court Level 4 / Unit 5 / Lesson 1/ pp.
416-421 Melissa Lape Wilson
Elementary
2infrasonic use context clues
- Its sound is infrasonic, meaning it is below the
level human can hear. - Earthquakes make infrasonic sounds that humans
can feel, but cannot hear. - Infrasonic- having a sound so low that people
cannot hear it.
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3Conversations use context clues
- All the conversations were short.
- The sisters had many conversations in which they
talked about their childhood. - conversations - exchanges of
- observations, opinions, or ideas
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4melody use context clues
- The Paynes heard the
- male humpbacks beautiful, long melody.
- That song is hard to sing because of its
complicated melody. - melody - a series of musical tones
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5choruses use context clues
- We depend on rhymes and repeating choruses to
help us remember long songs and poems. - These songs have choruses that repeat five or six
times. - choruses - part of a song that are repeated after
each verse
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6vibrations use context clues
- It also felt like the vibrations from the
whales infrasonic songs. - The vibrations of the foot massager tickled my
feet. - vibrations - slight, rapid movements
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7Each of these words has the sound /hw/ spelled wh
- whale
- whistles
- while
- whenever
- whiskers
- wharf
- wheel
- where
Place the palm of your hand in front of your
mouth. Say the word Whale and Was. You should
feel more breath on the palm of you hand when you
say whale.
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8Each of these words contains the long e sound.
Identify the long e spelling in each word.
- mystery
- eerie
- complete
- erupt
- these
- between
- believe
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9Each of these words shows possession
Identify the singular and plural possessive.
- worlds
- humpbacks
- elephants
- scientists
The apostrophe for the plural possessive comes
after the plural ending.
How are you able to distinguish between the
singular and plural possessive?
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10Each of these words contain the prefixes re-
(again) and un- (not)
Identify the root words and the prefix and define
the words.
- recount
- untamed
- rewrite
- recall
- untied
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11As soon as one whale sings a new song, the other
whales learn it.
- Identify the pronoun in the sentence.
- it
- What noun does it replace?
- song
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12How whales make their songs is still a mystery.
- Many interrogative sentences begin with the
adverb how, but in this sentence the word how is
used as a conjunction meaning, the way or manner
in which.
- Which question does this statement answer?
- How do whales make their sounds?
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13The humpbacks songs change each season.
- Identify the subject
- songs
- Identify the verb
- change
- Which word in the sentence shows possession?
- Humpbacks
- Is it a singular or plural possessive?
- singular
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14Untamed elephants roam freely in the Selous Game
Reserve.
- Which word contains the prefix un-?
- Untamed
- Use the prefix un-(not) and the root word to
figure out the meaning. - Not tamed
- Why is the Selous Game Reserve capitalized?
- It is a proper noun naming a particular place.
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