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Module 2 Valuing Others and their Circumstances 
Lesson 1 
FINDING OTHER’S GREATNESS 
We forge lasting relationships with others when we recognize their greatness instead of their weaknesses. This is an 
essential step in becoming connected with them. As the lesson unfolds, think of the question, 
“What is greatness?” 
- The quality of being great; something we yearn for, we dream. Greatness will be achieved through an enormous 
hard work over of what you wish for an extended period. 
Be not afraid of greatness; some are born great, some achieve greatness, and others have….greatness thrust upon 
them. 
-William Shakespeare 
Explanation: The quote means that every person is destined to be great at some point in their life and they should not be 
afraid of carrying that type of responsibility but there are some people are born great while others have to work at it. 
READING TEXT 1 Auld Lang Syne 
“The song Auld Lang Syne is referring to the new beginnings and changing times. It’s about letting go of the past and old 
relationships.” 
Motive Question: How do we celebrate the “greatness” of the people we know? 
- We can celebrate the greatness of the people we know y not forgetting the things they did that made them 
great and also having a small feast will do. 
READING TEXT 2 I Think Continually Of Those Who Were Truly Great- Stephen Spender 
Motive Question: Who do we consider truly great? 
- The poem I Think Continually of Those Who are Truly Great by Stephen Spender has an attempt to describe 
what makes a person “truly” great. The poem consider soldier as truly great not only the war men but also the 
people who selflessly fights for what they believe in. 
FIGURES OF SPEECH 
 ONOMATOPOEAI 
Onomatopoeia is sound device used by poets to suggest actions, mvements, and meanings. 
e.g., The hissing of the snake made me shoo it away. 
The bubbling brook breaks. 
 ALLITERATION 
Alliteration is the repetition of the same sounds or of the same kinds of sounds at the beginning of words or in stressed 
syllables of an English language phrase. 
 ASSONANCE 
Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds to create internal rhyming within phrase or sentences, and together with 
alliteration and consonance serves as one of the building blocks of verse. Assonance is a rhyme, the identity of which depends 
merely on the vowel sounds. 
 CONSONANCE 
Consonance is a poetic device characterized by the repetition of the same consonant two or more times in short succession, as 
in "pitter patter" or in "all mammals named Samare clammy“ 
 IMAGERY 
Imagery refers to the "pictures" which we perceive with our mind's eyes, ears, nose, tongue, skin, and through which we 
experience the "duplicate world" created by poetic language. 
 REPETITION 
Repetition is a central part of poetry that adds to the enjoyment of a poem. Words , phrases , or lines are repeated to serve a 
purpose. 
Examples: Oh, her eyes, her eyes make the stars look like they’re not shining. 
 METAPHOR 
Metaphor is a figure of speech that is used to refer to another thing in order to show or suggest that they are similar. 
Example. My brother was a boiling mad. (This implies that he was too angry.) 
 SIMILE 
A simile is a figure of speech that describes a subject by asserting that it is, on some point of comparison. It is a figure of speech 
comparing two unlike things using either “like” or “as”. 
 PERSONIFICATION 
It is a figure of speech in which a thing, an idea or an animal is given human attributes. (Pagbibigay buhay sa mga bagay na 
walang buhay.) 
Example: The wind whispered. 
 HYPERBOLE 
It is a figure of speech which uses exaggeration to evoke strong feelings . 
Example: I ate tons of hamburgers.
BODY LANGUAGE 
Verbal 35% 
Non-Verbal -65% 
Facial Expressions 
Tone of Voice 
Movement 
Appearance 
Eye Contact 
Gestures 
Posture 
ZONES 
Intimate 
Personal 
Social 
Public 
Shoulder Shrug 
Shows that a person does not know or understand what you are talking about 
Ring or Ok – means all correct 
THUMBS-UP 
It is an OK signal normally, but, when it is jerked sharply upwards it becomes an insult signal 
CONGRUENCE 
AGGRESSIVE PALM POSITION DOMINANT PALM POSITION SUBMISSIVE PALM POSITION 
CLENCHED HANDS 
High clenched hands indicate people who are difficult to decipher 
MOUTH GUARD CATCH A LIE.. 
Suppress the deceitful words Sometimes indicates thinking 
hard 
COLLAR PULL STANDARD ARM CROSS GESTURE 
Indicates anger & frustration Defensive or negative attitude 
ARM GRIPPING GESTURE PARTIAL ARM-CROSS BARRIER GESTURE 
Show that the user is 'cool’ lacking in self-confidence 
and to make his superiority felt 
READINESS STANDARD LEG-CROSS POSITION 
‘Readiness' which in the right context is correct, Shows nervous, reserved or 
but the basic meaning is aggression defensive attitude 
THE 4 LEG LOCK POSITION 
Sign of the tough-minded, stubborn individual 
TERRITORIAL GESTURE 
Indicates pride of ownership
SPEECH 
SPEAKER: Martin Luther King Speech 
TITLE: I Have a Dream 
TOPIC: He calls for an end to racism in the United States. 
SIGN POSTS AND KEY WORDS: 
I still have a dream, a dream deeply rooted in the American dream – one day this nation will rise up and live up to its 
creed, "We hold these truths to be self evident: that all men are created equal." I have a dream... Martin Luther King, J r. 
(1963) 
MAIN IDEA: An American Dream 
INFOGRAPHIC 
Information graphics or info graphics are graphic visual representations of information, data or knowledge intended to 
present complex information quickly and clearly. They can improve cognition by utilizing graphics to enhance the human 
visual system’s ability to see patterns and trends. The process of creating info graphics can be referred to as data 
visualization, information design, or information architecture. 
7 ELEMENTS IN MAKING INFOGRAPHIC 
#1. Story 
A story that is factual that can catch an attention to 
your audience. 
#2. Style 
Style is subjective but a good designer will know from 
experience what works. 
#3. Simplicity 
Simple design may do. Avoid confusion by creating flow 
and connection. 
#4. Size 
Consider the number of pixels. It must be clear. Avoid 
lengthy texts. Be concise. The shorter, the better. 
#5. Statistics 
If it is about stats, make sure they are factual and 
reliable, current and helpful. 
#6. Share ability 
Make your info graphic easy to share. Provide an embed 
code. 
#7. Source 
Make sure you attribute and let your audience know 
where you got the facts and figures from. Credibility is 
an important factor for a successful Info graphic.
What is an adverb of place? 
- These adverbs always answer one 
important question: Where? 
- An adverb of place always talks about the 
location where the action of the verb is 
being carried out. 
- Adverbs of place are normally placed after 
a sentence’s object or main verb. 
- Adverbs of place can be directional: Up, 
down, around, away, north, southeast 
- Adverbs of place can refer to distances: 
Nearby, far away, miles apart 
- An adverb of place can indicate an 
object’s position in relation to another 
object: Below, between, above, behind, 
through, around and so forth. 
- Many adverbs of place indicate movement 
in a particular direction and end in the 
letters “-ward or -wards”: Toward, 
forward, backward, homeward, westward, 
eastwards onwards 
NARRATIVE PARAGRAPH 
A narrative paragraph tells a story. It shows readers what happened at a particular place and time. 
SPEECH PREPARATION 
1. Vocal Variety: The Four P’s 
Power refers to the volume you project. 
Pitch is the frequency of the sound you emit. 
Pace is your speaking rate. 
Pause is a temporary stop in action or speech. 
2. Gestures / Body Language 
Gesture is a movement of part of the body, especially a hand or the head, to express an idea or meaning. 
3. Staging 
“Great speakers move around the speaking area with purpose.” 
Staging your speech means utilizing the 3-dimensional space around you in the most effective way possible. 
If you’re going to order the 3 (Speech Preparation) from the most to least important, what and why? 
- Vocal Variety- This is the most important in speech preparation because the audience needs to hear your voice 
because the message comes from your mouth and it needs to be heard. 
- Gestures-Gestures is important because this can make you and your speech interesting to watch. 
- Staging- This is important because making use of the area can make you a great speaker.
Module 2 Valuing Others and their Circumstances 
Lesson 2 
Observing Others’ Circumstances 
In the previous lesson, you have explored the concept on greatness. As you engage in the tasks in this 
lesson, ask yourself, 
“How do I view other people’s circumstances?” 
- I view others circumstances as a challenge to them to face that can make them and their life 
change. 
READING TEXT 1: The Man With the Hoe by Edwin Markham 
Motive Question: What circumstance is the persona faced with? 
- Today the farmers face a problem about their low salary. Their salary is not enough for their 
family, for their food and for other expenses. 
SONNET 
- is a poetic form which originated in Italy; Giacomo Da Lentini is credited with its invention. 
- sonnet is derived from the Italian word sonetto a little poem, song 
- Latin sonus a sound 
- By the thirteenth century it signified a poem of fourteen lines that follows a strict rhyme 
scheme and specific structure. 
- Writers of sonnets are sometimes called "sonneteers", although the term can be 
used derisively. 
What is a Sonnet? 
- It has 14 lines, and is written in iambic pentameter. 
Two types of sonnet: 
- Italian (or Petrarchan) 
- English (or Shakespearean) 
*The type of sonnet is determined by its rhyme scheme. 
Petrarchan (Italian) Sonnet 
- named after the 14th century Italian poet Francesco Petrarch 
- Italian, sonnet has an octave (or octet) of eight lines followed by a sestet of 6 lines. 
- patterns for the octet are: abbaabba and abbacddc 
- sestet has a pattern of defdef or dedede. 
Shakespearean (English) Sonnet 
- this form was used by William Shakespeare 
- differs from the Petrarchan sonnet in both its structure and its rhyme scheme 
- three quatrains of four lines 
- followed by a couplet of two lines 
- Shakespearean sonnets have a rhyme pattern that never varies: abab, cdcd, efef, gg 
Addressing this jobs challenge requires meeting a dual challenge: expanding formal sector 
employment even faster while rapidly raising the incomes of those informally employed. 
Adverb of manner 
An adverb of manner tells us how something is done or happens. Most adverbs of manner end in –ly 
such as badly, happily, sadly, slowly, quickly, and others that include well, hard, fast, etc. 
The brothers were badly injured in the fight. 
They had to act fast to save the others floating in the water. 
At the advanced age of 88, she still sang very well.
Word Formation: Derivation and Back-Formation 
- is the process of creating new words 
PROCESSES 
1. Derivation 
2. Back-formation 
3. Compounding 
4. Clipping 
5. Blending 
6. Conversion 
7. Abbreviations 
8. Acronyms 
9. Eponyms 
10. Coinages 
11. Nonce words 
12. Borrowing 
13. Calquing 
Derivation is the word formation process in which a derivational affix attaches to the base form of a word to create a 
new word. Affixes, which include prefixes and suffixes, are bound morphemes. 
Morphemes are the smallest linguistic unit of a language with semantic meaning. 
Prefixes 
a- – without, not 
co- – together 
de- – opposite, negative, removal, separation 
dis- –opposite, negative 
en- – cause to be 
ex- – former, previous, from 
in- – negative, not 
non- – absence, not 
re- – again, repeatedly 
un- – negative, not, opposite, reversal 
Suffixes 
-able – sense of being 
-er – agent 
-ful – characterized by 
-fy – make, become, cause to be 
-ism – action or practice, state or condition 
-less – lack of 
-ly – -like 
-ology – study, science 
-ship – condition, character, skill 
-y – characterized by, inclination, condition 
Grammatical Form Retaining Derivation 
verb to verb: appear → disappear 
noun to noun: friend → friendship 
adjective to adjective: practical → impractical 
Grammatical Form Changing Derivation 
verb to noun: preserve → preservation 
noun to verb: code → codify 
adjective to adverb: quick → quickly
Back-formation is the word formation process in which an actual or supposed derivational affix detaches from the base 
form of a word to create a new word. 
Original – Back-formation 
babysitter – babysit 
donation – donate 
gambler – gamble 
hazy – haze 
moonlighter – moonlight 
obsessive – obsess 
procession – process 
resurrection – resurrect 
sassy – sass 
television – televise 
Compounding is the word formation process in which two or more lexemes combine into a single new word. Compound 
words may be written as one word or as two words joined with a hyphen. 
Examples: 
noun-noun compound: note + book → notebook 
adjective-noun compound: blue + berry → blueberry 
verb-noun compound: work + room → workroom 
noun-verb compound: breast + feed → breastfeed 
verb-verb compound: stir + fry → stir-fry 
adjective-verb compound: high + light → highlight 
verb-preposition compound: break + up → breakup 
preposition-verb compound: out + run → outrun 
adjective-adjective compound: bitter + sweet → bittersweet 
preposition-preposition compound: in + to → into 
Clipping is the word formation process in which a word is reduced or shortened without changing the meaning of the 
word. Clipping differs from back-formation in that the new word retains the meaning of the original word. 
EXAMPLES: 
advertisement – ad 
memorandum – memo 
alligator – gator 
photograph – photo 
examination – exam 
public house – pub 
gasoline – gas 
raccoon – coon 
gymnasium – gym 
reputation – rep 
influenza – flu 
situation comedy – sitcom 
laboratory – lab 
telephone – phone 
mathematics – math 
FOUR TYPES OF CLIPPING 
- Back clipping is removing the end of a word as in gas from gasoline. 
- Fore-clipping is removing the beginning of a word as in gator from alligator. 
- Middle clipping is retaining only the middle of a word as in flu from influenza. 
- Complex clipping is removing multiple parts from multiple words as in sitcom from situation comedy. 
Blending is the word formation process in which parts of two or more words combines to create a new word whose 
meaning is often a combination of the original words. Blended words are also referred to as portmanteaus. 
Examples: 
advertisement + entertainment → advertainment 
prim + sissy → prissy 
biographical + picture → biopic 
simultaneous + broadcast → simulcast 
breakfast + lunch → brunch 
smoke + fog → smog 
chuckle + snort → chortle 
Spanish + English → Spanglish 
cybernetic + organism → cyborg 
spoon + fork → spork 
guess + estimate → guesstimate 
telephone + marathon → telethon 
hazardous + material → hazmat 
web + seminar → webinar 
motor + hotel → motel 
Conversion is the word formation process in which a word of one grammatical form becomes a word of another 
grammatical form without English any changes to spelling or pronunciation. 
Noun to Verb Conversion- is also referred to as verbification or verbing, as humorously discussed by Calvin and Hobbes. 
access – to access 
fiddle – to fiddle 
name – to name 
bottle – to bottle 
fool – to fool 
pocket – to pocket 
can – to can 
Google – to google 
salt – to salt 
closet – to closet 
host – to host 
shape – to shape 
email – to email 
knife – to knife 
ship – to ship 
eye – to eye 
microwave – to microwave 
spear – to spear
For example: 
My grandmother bottled (verb) the juice and canned (verb) the pickles. 
My grandmother put the juice in a bottle (noun) and the pickles in a can (noun). 
She microwaved (verb) her lunch. 
She heated her lunch in the microwave (noun). 
The doctor eyed (verb) my swollen eye (noun). 
Verb to Noun Conversion- is also referred to as nominalization 
to alert – alert 
to attack – attack 
to call – call 
to clone – clone 
to command – command 
to cover – cover 
to cry – cry 
to experience – experience 
to fear – fear 
to feel – feel 
to hope – hope 
to increase – increase 
to judge – judge 
to laugh – laugh 
to rise – rise 
to run – run 
to sleep – sleep 
to start – start 
to turn – turn 
to visit – visit 
For example: 
The guard alerted (verb) the general to the attack (noun). 
The enemy attacked (verb) before an alert (noun) could be sounded. 
Sometimes one just needs a good cry (noun). 
The baby cried (verb) all night. 
We need to increase (verb) our productivity to see an increase (noun) in profits. 
Abbreviation is the word formation process in which a word or phrase is shortened. Initialisms are a type of 
abbreviation formed by the initial letters of a word or phrase. Abbreviation is related to both the word formation 
processes of clipping and blending. 
Written Abbreviations 
Apr. – April 
cm – centimeter(s) 
d. – died, died in 
dept. – department 
Dr. – doctor 
Jr. – Junior 
Mr. – Mister 
oz – ounce(s) 
Sun. – Sunday 
yd – yard(s) 
Spoken-Written Abbreviations 
A.M. – ante meridiem [in the morning] 
B.C.E. – Before Common Era 
GOP – Grand Old Party (Republican Party) 
HIV – Human Immunodeficiency Virus 
i.e. – id est [that is] 
JFK – John Fitzgerald Kennedy 
OJ – orange juice 
PMS – premenstrual syndrome 
RSVP – répondezs'ilvous plait 
VIP – very important person 
Acronyms 
Acronyms are words formed by the word formation process in which an initialism is pronounced as a word. Acronyms 
are related to the word formation process of abbreviation. 
Examples: 
ASAP – as soon as possible 
AWOL – absent without leave 
laser - light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation 
NASA – National Aeronautics and Space Administration 
NASDAQ - National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations 
PIN – personal identification number 
radar - radio detection and ranging 
scuba - self-contained underwater breathing apparatus 
TESOL – Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages 
WASP – White Anglo-Saxon Protestant
Eponyms are a word form by the word formation process in which a new word is formed from the name of a real of 
fictitious person. 
Examples: 
atlas – Atlas 
mirandize – Ernesto A. Miranda 
boycott – Charles C. Boycott 
narcissistic – Narcissus 
cardigan – James Thomas Brudnell, 7th Earl of Cardigan 
nicotine – Jean Nicot 
cereal – Ceres 
pasteurization – Louis Pasteur 
dunce – John Duns Scotus 
poinsettia – Noel Roberts Poinsett 
guillotine – Joseph IgnaceGuillotin 
praline – César de Choiseul, Count Plessis–Praslin 
jacuzzi – Candido Jacuzzi 
sadistic – Marquis de Sade 
luddite – Ned Ludd 
salmonella – Daniel Elmer Salmon 
malapropism – Mrs. Malaprop 
sandwich – John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich 
mesmerize – Franz Anton Mesmer 
volcano – Vulcan 
Coinage is the word formation process in which a new word is created either deliberately or accidentally without using 
the other word formation processes and often from seemingly nothing. Coinages are also referred to simply as 
neologisms, the word neologism meaning "new word." 
aspirin 
Google 
nylon 
escalator 
kerosene 
psychedelic 
heroin 
Kleenex 
quark 
band-aid 
Laundromat 
Xerox 
factoid 
linoleum 
zipper 
Frisbee 
muggle 
Nonce words are new words formed through any number of word formation processes with the resulting word meeting 
a lexical need that is not expected to recur. Nonce words are created for the nonce, the term for the nonce meaning " for 
a single occasion." 
Examples: 
cotton-wool – to stuff or close (the ears) with cotton-wool. 
jabberwock – The name of the fabulous monster in Lewis Carroll's poem Jabberwocky. 
touch-me-not-ishness – having a "touch-me-not" character; stand-off-ish. 
twi-thought – an indistinct or vague thought. 
witchcraftical – The practices of a witch or witches; the exercise of supernatural power supposed to be possessed by 
persons in league with the devil or evil spirits. 
Borrowing is the word formation process in which a word from one language is borrowed directly into another 
language. Borrowed words are also referred to as loanwords. 
Examples: 
algebra – Arabic 
murder – French 
bagel – Yiddish 
near – Sanskrit 
cherub – Hebrew 
paprika – Hungarian 
chowmein – Chinese 
pizza – Italian 
fjord – Norwegian 
smorgasbord – Swedish 
galore – Irish 
tamale – Spanish 
haiku – Japanese 
yo-yo – Tagalog 
kielbasa – Polish 
Calquing is the word formation process in which a borrowed word or phrase is translated from one language to another. 
Calques are also referred to as root-for-root or word-for-word translations. 
Examples: 
beer garden – German – Biergarten 
blue-blood – Spanish – sangreazul 
commonplace – Latin – locus commūnis 
flea market – French – marché aux puces 
free verse – French – verslibre 
loanword – German – Lehnwort 
long time no see – Chinese – hǎojiǔbujiàn 
pineapple – Dutch – pijnappel 
scapegoat – Hebrew – ezozel 
wisdom tooth – Latin – dēnssapientiae

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English (Module 1 and 2)

  • 1. Module 2 Valuing Others and their Circumstances Lesson 1 FINDING OTHER’S GREATNESS We forge lasting relationships with others when we recognize their greatness instead of their weaknesses. This is an essential step in becoming connected with them. As the lesson unfolds, think of the question, “What is greatness?” - The quality of being great; something we yearn for, we dream. Greatness will be achieved through an enormous hard work over of what you wish for an extended period. Be not afraid of greatness; some are born great, some achieve greatness, and others have….greatness thrust upon them. -William Shakespeare Explanation: The quote means that every person is destined to be great at some point in their life and they should not be afraid of carrying that type of responsibility but there are some people are born great while others have to work at it. READING TEXT 1 Auld Lang Syne “The song Auld Lang Syne is referring to the new beginnings and changing times. It’s about letting go of the past and old relationships.” Motive Question: How do we celebrate the “greatness” of the people we know? - We can celebrate the greatness of the people we know y not forgetting the things they did that made them great and also having a small feast will do. READING TEXT 2 I Think Continually Of Those Who Were Truly Great- Stephen Spender Motive Question: Who do we consider truly great? - The poem I Think Continually of Those Who are Truly Great by Stephen Spender has an attempt to describe what makes a person “truly” great. The poem consider soldier as truly great not only the war men but also the people who selflessly fights for what they believe in. FIGURES OF SPEECH  ONOMATOPOEAI Onomatopoeia is sound device used by poets to suggest actions, mvements, and meanings. e.g., The hissing of the snake made me shoo it away. The bubbling brook breaks.  ALLITERATION Alliteration is the repetition of the same sounds or of the same kinds of sounds at the beginning of words or in stressed syllables of an English language phrase.  ASSONANCE Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds to create internal rhyming within phrase or sentences, and together with alliteration and consonance serves as one of the building blocks of verse. Assonance is a rhyme, the identity of which depends merely on the vowel sounds.  CONSONANCE Consonance is a poetic device characterized by the repetition of the same consonant two or more times in short succession, as in "pitter patter" or in "all mammals named Samare clammy“  IMAGERY Imagery refers to the "pictures" which we perceive with our mind's eyes, ears, nose, tongue, skin, and through which we experience the "duplicate world" created by poetic language.  REPETITION Repetition is a central part of poetry that adds to the enjoyment of a poem. Words , phrases , or lines are repeated to serve a purpose. Examples: Oh, her eyes, her eyes make the stars look like they’re not shining.  METAPHOR Metaphor is a figure of speech that is used to refer to another thing in order to show or suggest that they are similar. Example. My brother was a boiling mad. (This implies that he was too angry.)  SIMILE A simile is a figure of speech that describes a subject by asserting that it is, on some point of comparison. It is a figure of speech comparing two unlike things using either “like” or “as”.  PERSONIFICATION It is a figure of speech in which a thing, an idea or an animal is given human attributes. (Pagbibigay buhay sa mga bagay na walang buhay.) Example: The wind whispered.  HYPERBOLE It is a figure of speech which uses exaggeration to evoke strong feelings . Example: I ate tons of hamburgers.
  • 2. BODY LANGUAGE Verbal 35% Non-Verbal -65% Facial Expressions Tone of Voice Movement Appearance Eye Contact Gestures Posture ZONES Intimate Personal Social Public Shoulder Shrug Shows that a person does not know or understand what you are talking about Ring or Ok – means all correct THUMBS-UP It is an OK signal normally, but, when it is jerked sharply upwards it becomes an insult signal CONGRUENCE AGGRESSIVE PALM POSITION DOMINANT PALM POSITION SUBMISSIVE PALM POSITION CLENCHED HANDS High clenched hands indicate people who are difficult to decipher MOUTH GUARD CATCH A LIE.. Suppress the deceitful words Sometimes indicates thinking hard COLLAR PULL STANDARD ARM CROSS GESTURE Indicates anger & frustration Defensive or negative attitude ARM GRIPPING GESTURE PARTIAL ARM-CROSS BARRIER GESTURE Show that the user is 'cool’ lacking in self-confidence and to make his superiority felt READINESS STANDARD LEG-CROSS POSITION ‘Readiness' which in the right context is correct, Shows nervous, reserved or but the basic meaning is aggression defensive attitude THE 4 LEG LOCK POSITION Sign of the tough-minded, stubborn individual TERRITORIAL GESTURE Indicates pride of ownership
  • 3. SPEECH SPEAKER: Martin Luther King Speech TITLE: I Have a Dream TOPIC: He calls for an end to racism in the United States. SIGN POSTS AND KEY WORDS: I still have a dream, a dream deeply rooted in the American dream – one day this nation will rise up and live up to its creed, "We hold these truths to be self evident: that all men are created equal." I have a dream... Martin Luther King, J r. (1963) MAIN IDEA: An American Dream INFOGRAPHIC Information graphics or info graphics are graphic visual representations of information, data or knowledge intended to present complex information quickly and clearly. They can improve cognition by utilizing graphics to enhance the human visual system’s ability to see patterns and trends. The process of creating info graphics can be referred to as data visualization, information design, or information architecture. 7 ELEMENTS IN MAKING INFOGRAPHIC #1. Story A story that is factual that can catch an attention to your audience. #2. Style Style is subjective but a good designer will know from experience what works. #3. Simplicity Simple design may do. Avoid confusion by creating flow and connection. #4. Size Consider the number of pixels. It must be clear. Avoid lengthy texts. Be concise. The shorter, the better. #5. Statistics If it is about stats, make sure they are factual and reliable, current and helpful. #6. Share ability Make your info graphic easy to share. Provide an embed code. #7. Source Make sure you attribute and let your audience know where you got the facts and figures from. Credibility is an important factor for a successful Info graphic.
  • 4. What is an adverb of place? - These adverbs always answer one important question: Where? - An adverb of place always talks about the location where the action of the verb is being carried out. - Adverbs of place are normally placed after a sentence’s object or main verb. - Adverbs of place can be directional: Up, down, around, away, north, southeast - Adverbs of place can refer to distances: Nearby, far away, miles apart - An adverb of place can indicate an object’s position in relation to another object: Below, between, above, behind, through, around and so forth. - Many adverbs of place indicate movement in a particular direction and end in the letters “-ward or -wards”: Toward, forward, backward, homeward, westward, eastwards onwards NARRATIVE PARAGRAPH A narrative paragraph tells a story. It shows readers what happened at a particular place and time. SPEECH PREPARATION 1. Vocal Variety: The Four P’s Power refers to the volume you project. Pitch is the frequency of the sound you emit. Pace is your speaking rate. Pause is a temporary stop in action or speech. 2. Gestures / Body Language Gesture is a movement of part of the body, especially a hand or the head, to express an idea or meaning. 3. Staging “Great speakers move around the speaking area with purpose.” Staging your speech means utilizing the 3-dimensional space around you in the most effective way possible. If you’re going to order the 3 (Speech Preparation) from the most to least important, what and why? - Vocal Variety- This is the most important in speech preparation because the audience needs to hear your voice because the message comes from your mouth and it needs to be heard. - Gestures-Gestures is important because this can make you and your speech interesting to watch. - Staging- This is important because making use of the area can make you a great speaker.
  • 5. Module 2 Valuing Others and their Circumstances Lesson 2 Observing Others’ Circumstances In the previous lesson, you have explored the concept on greatness. As you engage in the tasks in this lesson, ask yourself, “How do I view other people’s circumstances?” - I view others circumstances as a challenge to them to face that can make them and their life change. READING TEXT 1: The Man With the Hoe by Edwin Markham Motive Question: What circumstance is the persona faced with? - Today the farmers face a problem about their low salary. Their salary is not enough for their family, for their food and for other expenses. SONNET - is a poetic form which originated in Italy; Giacomo Da Lentini is credited with its invention. - sonnet is derived from the Italian word sonetto a little poem, song - Latin sonus a sound - By the thirteenth century it signified a poem of fourteen lines that follows a strict rhyme scheme and specific structure. - Writers of sonnets are sometimes called "sonneteers", although the term can be used derisively. What is a Sonnet? - It has 14 lines, and is written in iambic pentameter. Two types of sonnet: - Italian (or Petrarchan) - English (or Shakespearean) *The type of sonnet is determined by its rhyme scheme. Petrarchan (Italian) Sonnet - named after the 14th century Italian poet Francesco Petrarch - Italian, sonnet has an octave (or octet) of eight lines followed by a sestet of 6 lines. - patterns for the octet are: abbaabba and abbacddc - sestet has a pattern of defdef or dedede. Shakespearean (English) Sonnet - this form was used by William Shakespeare - differs from the Petrarchan sonnet in both its structure and its rhyme scheme - three quatrains of four lines - followed by a couplet of two lines - Shakespearean sonnets have a rhyme pattern that never varies: abab, cdcd, efef, gg Addressing this jobs challenge requires meeting a dual challenge: expanding formal sector employment even faster while rapidly raising the incomes of those informally employed. Adverb of manner An adverb of manner tells us how something is done or happens. Most adverbs of manner end in –ly such as badly, happily, sadly, slowly, quickly, and others that include well, hard, fast, etc. The brothers were badly injured in the fight. They had to act fast to save the others floating in the water. At the advanced age of 88, she still sang very well.
  • 6. Word Formation: Derivation and Back-Formation - is the process of creating new words PROCESSES 1. Derivation 2. Back-formation 3. Compounding 4. Clipping 5. Blending 6. Conversion 7. Abbreviations 8. Acronyms 9. Eponyms 10. Coinages 11. Nonce words 12. Borrowing 13. Calquing Derivation is the word formation process in which a derivational affix attaches to the base form of a word to create a new word. Affixes, which include prefixes and suffixes, are bound morphemes. Morphemes are the smallest linguistic unit of a language with semantic meaning. Prefixes a- – without, not co- – together de- – opposite, negative, removal, separation dis- –opposite, negative en- – cause to be ex- – former, previous, from in- – negative, not non- – absence, not re- – again, repeatedly un- – negative, not, opposite, reversal Suffixes -able – sense of being -er – agent -ful – characterized by -fy – make, become, cause to be -ism – action or practice, state or condition -less – lack of -ly – -like -ology – study, science -ship – condition, character, skill -y – characterized by, inclination, condition Grammatical Form Retaining Derivation verb to verb: appear → disappear noun to noun: friend → friendship adjective to adjective: practical → impractical Grammatical Form Changing Derivation verb to noun: preserve → preservation noun to verb: code → codify adjective to adverb: quick → quickly
  • 7. Back-formation is the word formation process in which an actual or supposed derivational affix detaches from the base form of a word to create a new word. Original – Back-formation babysitter – babysit donation – donate gambler – gamble hazy – haze moonlighter – moonlight obsessive – obsess procession – process resurrection – resurrect sassy – sass television – televise Compounding is the word formation process in which two or more lexemes combine into a single new word. Compound words may be written as one word or as two words joined with a hyphen. Examples: noun-noun compound: note + book → notebook adjective-noun compound: blue + berry → blueberry verb-noun compound: work + room → workroom noun-verb compound: breast + feed → breastfeed verb-verb compound: stir + fry → stir-fry adjective-verb compound: high + light → highlight verb-preposition compound: break + up → breakup preposition-verb compound: out + run → outrun adjective-adjective compound: bitter + sweet → bittersweet preposition-preposition compound: in + to → into Clipping is the word formation process in which a word is reduced or shortened without changing the meaning of the word. Clipping differs from back-formation in that the new word retains the meaning of the original word. EXAMPLES: advertisement – ad memorandum – memo alligator – gator photograph – photo examination – exam public house – pub gasoline – gas raccoon – coon gymnasium – gym reputation – rep influenza – flu situation comedy – sitcom laboratory – lab telephone – phone mathematics – math FOUR TYPES OF CLIPPING - Back clipping is removing the end of a word as in gas from gasoline. - Fore-clipping is removing the beginning of a word as in gator from alligator. - Middle clipping is retaining only the middle of a word as in flu from influenza. - Complex clipping is removing multiple parts from multiple words as in sitcom from situation comedy. Blending is the word formation process in which parts of two or more words combines to create a new word whose meaning is often a combination of the original words. Blended words are also referred to as portmanteaus. Examples: advertisement + entertainment → advertainment prim + sissy → prissy biographical + picture → biopic simultaneous + broadcast → simulcast breakfast + lunch → brunch smoke + fog → smog chuckle + snort → chortle Spanish + English → Spanglish cybernetic + organism → cyborg spoon + fork → spork guess + estimate → guesstimate telephone + marathon → telethon hazardous + material → hazmat web + seminar → webinar motor + hotel → motel Conversion is the word formation process in which a word of one grammatical form becomes a word of another grammatical form without English any changes to spelling or pronunciation. Noun to Verb Conversion- is also referred to as verbification or verbing, as humorously discussed by Calvin and Hobbes. access – to access fiddle – to fiddle name – to name bottle – to bottle fool – to fool pocket – to pocket can – to can Google – to google salt – to salt closet – to closet host – to host shape – to shape email – to email knife – to knife ship – to ship eye – to eye microwave – to microwave spear – to spear
  • 8. For example: My grandmother bottled (verb) the juice and canned (verb) the pickles. My grandmother put the juice in a bottle (noun) and the pickles in a can (noun). She microwaved (verb) her lunch. She heated her lunch in the microwave (noun). The doctor eyed (verb) my swollen eye (noun). Verb to Noun Conversion- is also referred to as nominalization to alert – alert to attack – attack to call – call to clone – clone to command – command to cover – cover to cry – cry to experience – experience to fear – fear to feel – feel to hope – hope to increase – increase to judge – judge to laugh – laugh to rise – rise to run – run to sleep – sleep to start – start to turn – turn to visit – visit For example: The guard alerted (verb) the general to the attack (noun). The enemy attacked (verb) before an alert (noun) could be sounded. Sometimes one just needs a good cry (noun). The baby cried (verb) all night. We need to increase (verb) our productivity to see an increase (noun) in profits. Abbreviation is the word formation process in which a word or phrase is shortened. Initialisms are a type of abbreviation formed by the initial letters of a word or phrase. Abbreviation is related to both the word formation processes of clipping and blending. Written Abbreviations Apr. – April cm – centimeter(s) d. – died, died in dept. – department Dr. – doctor Jr. – Junior Mr. – Mister oz – ounce(s) Sun. – Sunday yd – yard(s) Spoken-Written Abbreviations A.M. – ante meridiem [in the morning] B.C.E. – Before Common Era GOP – Grand Old Party (Republican Party) HIV – Human Immunodeficiency Virus i.e. – id est [that is] JFK – John Fitzgerald Kennedy OJ – orange juice PMS – premenstrual syndrome RSVP – répondezs'ilvous plait VIP – very important person Acronyms Acronyms are words formed by the word formation process in which an initialism is pronounced as a word. Acronyms are related to the word formation process of abbreviation. Examples: ASAP – as soon as possible AWOL – absent without leave laser - light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation NASA – National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASDAQ - National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations PIN – personal identification number radar - radio detection and ranging scuba - self-contained underwater breathing apparatus TESOL – Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages WASP – White Anglo-Saxon Protestant
  • 9. Eponyms are a word form by the word formation process in which a new word is formed from the name of a real of fictitious person. Examples: atlas – Atlas mirandize – Ernesto A. Miranda boycott – Charles C. Boycott narcissistic – Narcissus cardigan – James Thomas Brudnell, 7th Earl of Cardigan nicotine – Jean Nicot cereal – Ceres pasteurization – Louis Pasteur dunce – John Duns Scotus poinsettia – Noel Roberts Poinsett guillotine – Joseph IgnaceGuillotin praline – César de Choiseul, Count Plessis–Praslin jacuzzi – Candido Jacuzzi sadistic – Marquis de Sade luddite – Ned Ludd salmonella – Daniel Elmer Salmon malapropism – Mrs. Malaprop sandwich – John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich mesmerize – Franz Anton Mesmer volcano – Vulcan Coinage is the word formation process in which a new word is created either deliberately or accidentally without using the other word formation processes and often from seemingly nothing. Coinages are also referred to simply as neologisms, the word neologism meaning "new word." aspirin Google nylon escalator kerosene psychedelic heroin Kleenex quark band-aid Laundromat Xerox factoid linoleum zipper Frisbee muggle Nonce words are new words formed through any number of word formation processes with the resulting word meeting a lexical need that is not expected to recur. Nonce words are created for the nonce, the term for the nonce meaning " for a single occasion." Examples: cotton-wool – to stuff or close (the ears) with cotton-wool. jabberwock – The name of the fabulous monster in Lewis Carroll's poem Jabberwocky. touch-me-not-ishness – having a "touch-me-not" character; stand-off-ish. twi-thought – an indistinct or vague thought. witchcraftical – The practices of a witch or witches; the exercise of supernatural power supposed to be possessed by persons in league with the devil or evil spirits. Borrowing is the word formation process in which a word from one language is borrowed directly into another language. Borrowed words are also referred to as loanwords. Examples: algebra – Arabic murder – French bagel – Yiddish near – Sanskrit cherub – Hebrew paprika – Hungarian chowmein – Chinese pizza – Italian fjord – Norwegian smorgasbord – Swedish galore – Irish tamale – Spanish haiku – Japanese yo-yo – Tagalog kielbasa – Polish Calquing is the word formation process in which a borrowed word or phrase is translated from one language to another. Calques are also referred to as root-for-root or word-for-word translations. Examples: beer garden – German – Biergarten blue-blood – Spanish – sangreazul commonplace – Latin – locus commūnis flea market – French – marché aux puces free verse – French – verslibre loanword – German – Lehnwort long time no see – Chinese – hǎojiǔbujiàn pineapple – Dutch – pijnappel scapegoat – Hebrew – ezozel wisdom tooth – Latin – dēnssapientiae