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Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Hyperbole

Tuesday 20 September 2016

Hyperbole

A hyperbole is a form of a figurative language like similes and metaphors. Hyperboles are used for emphasising and humour in speaking and writing.

Examples of hyperbole

  • It was so cold I saw polar bears wearing jackets.
  • I had a tine of chores to do.
  • She is as thin as a toothpick ( Simile / Hyperbole ).
  • He was skinny enough to jump through a keyhole.
  • He smile was mile wide.
  • His brain is the size of a pea.
  • You are walking slower than a snail.
  • His stomach is a bottomless pit.
  • I was so hungry that I could have eaten an ox.

Thursday, September 15, 2016

Personification

Thursday 15 september 2016

Personification

Everyone knows what a person is, but do you know what personification is? A personification is when you assign human qualities to something that isn't alive.

Examples of personifications

  • The stars DANCED playfully in the moonlit sky.
  • The run down house APPEARED depressed.
  • The first rays of the morning TIPTOED through the meadow.
  • The bees PLAYED hide and seek with the flowers as they buzzed from one to another.
  • The river SWALLOWED the earth as the water continued to rise higher and higher.
  • The thunder GRUMBLED like an old man
  • At precisely 6:30am my alarm clock SPRANG into life
  • The news TOOK me by surprise.
  • The EVIL tree was lurking into the shadows.
  • The ocean DANCED into the moonlight.

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Explanation writing: The water cycle

Tuesday 13 September 2016

Did you know that there is the same amount of water on the earth today as when the earth was created. Water is very important for the survival of plants, animals and human beings. I will provide you with an explanation on how water is recycled.

The water cycle is also call hydro logical cycle. This includes precipitation, evaporation, condensation and transpiration. Water changes from liquid, vapor and then back to liquid again.

Firstly water from the  lakes, rivers,  streams and sea is heated by the sun and then evaporates. When it evaporates, it forms clouds by a process called condensation.

When the  clouds become heavy it falls down as rain assisted by gravity. If it falls down in solid form, it is snow or sleet.

The water reaches the ground and flows across the land until it reaches rivers, lakes streams and the sea. Some of the water also sinks into the ground.

The water cycle begins all over again by evaporation. ]





Glossary.

Precipitation: The action or process of precipitating a substance from a solution.

Evaporation: Is the process of a substance in a liquid state changing to a gaseous state due to an increase in temperature and/or pressure

Condensation: Water which collects as droplets on a cold surface when humid air is in contact with it.

Transpiration:  Is the process by which moisture is carried through plants from roots to small pores on the underside of leaves, where it changes to vapor and is released to the atmosphere.





Thursday, September 8, 2016

Reading: Correct Use Of Commas

Thursday 8 September 2016


Correct Use of commas


  • We bought apples pears bananas and oranges for the fruit salad.
= We bought apples, pears, bananas and oranges for fruit salad.


  • Although we arrived early the restaurant was full.
= Although we arrived early, the restaurant was full.


  • Yes you can put the christmas tree up tomorrow.
= Yes, you can put the christmas tree up tomorrow.


  • If you eat your Vegetables you may have dessert
= If you eat Vegetables, you may have dessert.


  • Lizards snakes and turtles are all reptiles
= Lizard, snakes and turtles are all reptiles.

Poem: The great water giant

Tuesday 6 September 2016


The great water giant: Poem


The great water giant
Has finished his bath
He pulls the huge plug
Out if the clouds
He roars his thunderous laugh
And a wet slippery waterfall
Spills out of a squelchy sky.
Look out below he seems to
Shout
As the water
Splashes , splashes, polishes
Polishes gushes , rushes  
And soaks deep into the thirsty
Earth.


Questions.
  1. What is the poem about? Water


2. Which figurative language is used throughout the poem.  Personification


3 . Why do you think the words look out below is in speech marks?  The rain is talking.


4. What can we infer about the earth? Tell me the word that indicates this. Thirsty.




Explanation Writing: Why houses have windows

Thursday 8 September 2016


Explanation Writing


Have you considered why houses have windows? I will provide you with many reasons as to why houses have windows in their house.


There are many different shapes of windows. e.g. circle ones, square ones and many more. Your house will look attractive with windows. People put blinds and curtains in their house. This will make the house look beautiful from in and outside.


Oxygen is always good for people who have health problems. Having your house stuffy will make sick people more sick. It is better having air running through your house instead of it being damp and dusty. How would you feel if your house was damp and dusty? Windows are also good to have because it will let Oxygen into your house. Without oxygen in your house, it will be hot and stuffy. If you have any health problems, it is always good to have windows so air and oxygen flowing through your house.


Having windows in your house will keep you and your whanau safe. Having windows is always a great thing because there are criminals stealing, robbing, killing and hurting whanau. How would you feel if there were criminals out and about? I certainly will not feel safe.


Having Windows is great because people may want to look outside and see the view. Looking outside is always a great thing. People may want to see what it’s  like outside or if it’s good for children to play.


Windows provide natural light and warmth in the winter. Windows help when it’s winter. You can close them when it’s cold outside. They keep coldness out when it’s winter.


It is also good to have windows incase you need to get out because there might be a fire. Windows are always a good thing to have. Imagine a fire starting and there is no where out. How would you feel if a fire started by the door and there were no windows?


Some people have double glazed  windows. Double glazing windows are useful to  people who require some peace and think time to think, plus who would want their thoughts interrupted by something noisy like a loud screech of tyres?


I trust that I have provided you with many reasons as to why we should have windows in our houses.



Explanation Writing: Why houses have windows

Thursday 8 September 2016


Explanation Writing


Have you considered why houses have windows? I will provide you with many reasons as to why houses have windows in their house.


There are many different shapes of windows. e.g. circle ones, square ones and many more. Your house will look attractive with windows. People put blinds and curtains in their house. This will make the house look beautiful from in and outside.


Oxygen is always good for people who have health problems. Having your house stuffy will make sick people more sick. It is better having air running through your house instead of it being damp and dusty. How would you feel if your house was damp and dusty? Windows are also good to have because it will let Oxygen into your house. Without oxygen in your house, it will be hot and stuffy. If you have any health problems, it is always good to have windows so air and oxygen flowing through your house.


Having windows in your house will keep you and your whanau safe. Having windows is always a great thing because there are criminals stealing, robbing, killing and hurting whanau. How would you feel if there were criminals out and about? I certainly will not feel safe.


Having Windows is great because people may want to look outside and see the view. Looking outside is always a great thing. People may want to see what it’s  like outside or if it’s good for children to play.


Windows provide natural light and warmth in the winter. Windows help when it’s winter. You can close them when it’s cold outside. They keep coldness out when it’s winter.


It is also good to have windows incase you need to get out because there might be a fire. Windows are always a good thing to have. Imagine a fire starting and there is no where out. How would you feel if a fire started by the door and there were no windows?


Some people have double glazed  windows. Double glazing windows are useful to  people who require some peace and think time to think, plus who would want their thoughts interrupted by something noisy like a loud screech of tyres?


I trust that I have provided you with many reasons as to why we should have windows in our houses.



Explanation Writing: The cycle of a bee

Thursday 1st September 2016


Bees are social insects that live in organised groups called colonies .  Inside the hive,  there is a queen bee, many worker bees and male bees called drones.


The queen bee lays around 3000 eggs a day for the rest of her life and she never leaves the hive.


Four days after the eggs are laid, they hatch into larvae.  The larvae are fed with bee bread and this is a  mixture of pollen and nectar.


Nine days of hatching, the larvae gets covered in wax and they do not eat during this time. They begin the transformation into the pupa stage.


After 21 days the pupa starts to open and then a worker bee emerges and is ready to collect pollen to make honey for the hive.


This  life cycle is called metamorphosis.


Drones : A male bee


Glossary means:  an alphabetical list of words relating to a specific subject, text, or dialect, with explanations; a brief dictionary.


Pollen means: a fine powdery substance, typically yellow, consisting of microscopic grains discharged from the male part of a flower or from a male cone. Each grain contains a male gamete that can fertilize the female ovule, to which pollen is transported by the wind, insects, or other animals.


Larvae means: the active immature form of an insect, especially one that differs greatly from the adult and forms the stage between egg and pupa, e.g. a caterpillar or grubs.

Explanation Writing: How is food digested

Thursday 8th September 2016

Do you know how food is digested? I will provide you with an explanation as to what happens when you eat food.


 When food is placed in your mouth, it is  masticated by your teeth and saliva.  The food is then moved to the back of your mouth by your tongue. This place is called the trapdoor or esophagus.


The food then moves into the stomach where it is broken down by digestive  juices. The  broken down food moves into small intestine. Here the goodness is soaked in.


The food is moved into the large intestine. The water is then taken out. The food that is needed by the body is transported by the  blood to all parts of the body. The body's uses it for repair, energy and growth.

The waste food is excreted through the anus.

Friday, September 2, 2016