I’m sitting here looking out of the window. Nothing’s happening; it never does. I sit here every day for hours on end, just looking. Looking for what? I don’t know. They never told me what I should be looking for. And I’ve never found out.
I once thought I’d found something, but I couldn’t be sure. It might just have been a trick of the light. How was I to tell?
Explain that the word polysemy refers to the idea that words can have more than one meaning
Ask the learners to think of more than one meaning for the words football and mouse and discuss with a partner or small group. Show the next slide to reveal some possible answers.
As an extension, see if learners can come up with any other words with multiple meanings.
To learn and practise the spelling rules associated with base words ending in consonant letters when endings (suffixes) are added.
Lesson plan
The lesson is divided into a series of activities where students
group words according to whether they double the final consonant letter when a suffix is added, or not. For each set of
examples, students are
asked to identify and make predictions about the patterns for this area
of spelling.
To learn and practise the spelling rules associated with base words (of more than one syllable) ending in consonant letters when endings (suffixes) are added.
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