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Close Reading Standard Grade Revision

Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

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Page 1: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Close Reading

Standard Grade Revision

Page 2: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on

connotations Technique Questions- Imagery- quote

and comment on connotations Structure Questions In Your Own Words- try to avoid using

words from passage Tone- memorise tones Linking- remember the ‘winning

formula’ Context- quote and comment on

connotations

Page 3: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Word Choice Iain crouched behind one of the stooks

listening, watching for deepening shadows, his face and

hands sweaty, his knees trembling with excitement. Then quite suddenly he heard the

voices fading away from him, as if the boys had tired of their game and gone home, leaving

him undetected. Q1: In Paragraph 1, the writer suggests

Iain’s feeling of excitement. By referring to one example from Paragraph 1, explain how word choice is used to achieve this.

Page 4: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer: (face and hands) sweaty/(knees)

trembling (1) + suitable explanation (1)

Page 5: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

He looked up at the moon which was quite cold in the sky. He could see the dark spots on it and it seemed to move backwards into the sky as he looked. What an extraordinary calm was everywhere. It was as if he had been left in charge of the night, as if he was the only person alive, as if he must take responsibility for the whole world. No sound of footsteps could be heard from the road that lay between the wall and the houses.

The silence lasted so long that he was afraid to move. He formed his lips as if to speak but he didn’t have the courage. It was as if the night didn’t want him to speak, were forbidding him to do so, as if it were saying to him, This is my kingdom, you are not to do anything I don’t wish you to do. He could no longer hear the noise of the sea, as if it too had been commanded to be quiet. It was like a yellow shield in the distance, flat and made of hammered gold.

Page 6: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Q2: Explain how word choice is used to indicate the power of the night.

Page 7: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer

“forbidding”/“(my) kingdom”/“you are not to do”/“I don’t wish you to do”/“commanded” (1) and suitable explanation e.g. night as a ruler/night making demands OR threats (1)

Page 8: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Then they came closer together, and the boys seemed suddenly very far away. The stooks

were pressed against each other, composing a thorny spiky wall. He screamed suddenly and

stopped, for at the sound the stooks had resumed their original positions. They were like

pieces on a board. He began to count them again, his heart beating irregularly. Thirteen,

where there had been twelve before. Where had the thirteenth come from?

Q3: Show how the writer conveys the idea that Iain feels threatened by the stooks.

Page 9: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer

reference to “came closer together”/“pressed against each other”/“thorny” OR

“spiky (wall)”/“screamed”/extra stook/unlucky number/

“heart beating irregularly” 2 1 0Any two (1) + (1)

Page 10: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

The moonlight shimmered among the stooks so that they looked like men, or women,

who had fallen asleep upright. The silence gathered around him, except that now and again he could hear the bark of a dog and the noise of the sea. He touched the stubble with his

finger and felt it sharp and thorny as if it might draw blood. From where he was he could

see the lights of the houses but there was no human shape to be seen anywhere. The moon

made a white road across the distant sea.

Technique Questions

Page 11: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Technique Questions

Q4: “The moon made a white road across the distant sea.” (Paragraph 2)

(a) What technique is used in this expression?

(b) Explain fully what this expression suggests about the moonlight.

Page 12: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer

metaphor (2)

straight/long OR stretches into the distance/(almost) “solid” quality/bright/ contrasts with darkness

Any two (1) + (1)

Page 13: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

The stooks weren’t all at the same angle to the earth. As he listened in the quietness he

seemed to hear them talking in strawy voices, speaking in a sort of sharp, strawy language.

They were whispering to each other, deep and rough and sharp. Their language sounded

very odd, not at all liquid and running, but like the voice of stones, thorns. The field was

alive with their conversation. Perhaps they were discussing the scythe that had cut them

down, the boys that played hide and seek among them. They were busy and hissing as if

they had to speak as much as possible before the light strengthened around them.

Page 14: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

“. . . he seemed to hear them talking . . .” (Paragraph 11)

Q5. By referring to the passage, identify and explain one technique the writer uses to

describe the stooks’ language.

Page 15: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer

repetition of “strawy”/“sharp” OR list: “deep and rough and sharp”

OR contrast: “not at all ... thorns” OR simile: “like the voice of stones, thorns”

OR onomatopoeia: eg “(busy and) hissing”/“whispering” OR alliteration: “strawy voices ... strawy language” OR word choice eg “deep”, “rough”, “sharp”, “whispering” (1) and suitable explanation (1)

NB identification of technique alone without reference to passage = 0

Page 16: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Then quite suddenly he heard the voices fading away from him, as if the boys had tired of their game and gone home, leaving him undetected. Their voices were like bells in the distance, each answering the other and then falling silent. He was alone.

Page 17: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Q6. a) Iain hears the voices of the other

boys. Quote a simile which describes their voices.

b) What does it suggest about their voices?

Page 18: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer

“(Their voices were) like bells in the distance” (1)

Echoing/fading/musical/in sequence/carrying (over the fields) (1)

Page 19: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Structure QuestionsThis brought me down the staircase at great

speed. I jumped the last four stepsand circled round the adults, flapping my

arms in impersonation of a bird of prey. AsI did so, to my delight, I heard my mother

laughing; laughing in a way I had notheard her laugh for a while. In fact it is

possible it was this very atmosphere—thisfeeling that things were perhaps starting to

return to what they had been—whichplayed a significant part in causing me to

“lower my guard”. I asked Uncle Philipwhen we could go, to which he shrugged

and said:

Page 20: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Q7. Explain the function of the dashes in

“. . . this very atmosphere—this feeling that

things were perhaps starting to return to what they had been—which played . . .”

(Paragraph 4)

Page 21: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer

parenthesis/gives extra information (1)

about the atmosphere/Christopher’s feelings OR situation (1)

Page 22: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

For the next few moments I remained standing there in the crowd, trying not to

pursue the logic of what had just occurred. Then suddenly I began to move, back in

the direction we had just come, to the street in which we had left the carriage.

Abandoning all sense of decorum, I forced my way through the crowds, sometimes

pushing violently, sometimes squeezing myself through gaps, so that people laughed

or called angrily after me. I reached the street to discover of course that the carriage

had long since gone on its way.

Page 23: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Q8. “Then suddenly I began to move ...” (Paragraph 19)

Comment on the writer’s use of word choice and sentence structure in this paragraph to describe Christopher’s journey back.

Page 24: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer Word choice:“forced”/“pushing”/“violently”/“squeez

ing”/“abandoning” (1)indicating his

desperation/urgency/difficulty (1)OR “people laughed”/“called angrily”

(1) suggests indifference of those 2 1 0

around him to his misery (1)OR “confused”/“trying to form in my

head” (1) suggest uncertainty (1)

Page 25: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Sentence structure:reference to long sentence/many

phrases (punctuated by commas (1)suggests long journey home/struggle

(1)OR repetition of “sometimes” (with

verb) (1) suggests difficulty of getting 2 1 0

through crowds (1)OR short sentence at end of paragraph

(1) suggests dramatic climax (1)

Page 26: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

The play—for which Briony had designed the posters, programmes and tickets,

constructed the sales booth out of a folding screen tipped on its side, and lined the

collection box in red crêpe paper—was written by her in a two-day tempest of

composition, causing her to miss a breakfast and a lunch. When the preparations

were complete, she had nothing to do but contemplate her finished draft and wait for

the appearance of her cousins from the distant north. There would be time for only

one day of rehearsal before her brother, Leon, arrived.

Page 27: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Q9. In Paragraph 1, the writer shows how committed Briony has been to this task.

Explain how sentence structure and word choice indicate Briony’s high level of commitment.

Page 28: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer

sentence structure:list (of things she has done)/repetition

(of verb structure)/parenthesis(to include extra tasks)/long sentence

(1)emphasises multiple nature of tasks

identification of technique and explanation required for 2 marks

NB Explanation alone = 0

Page 29: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

word choice:(two-day) tempest (of

composition) (1)suggests

energetic/feverish/dedicated approach (1) NB No quotation of “tempest” = 0

Page 30: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

In the box were treasures that dated back four years, to her ninth birthday when she began collecting: a mutant double acorn, fool’s gold, a rain-making spell bought at a funfair, a squirrel’s skull as light as a leaf.

Q10. Explain why a colon is used in the expression “when she began collecting:”

(Paragraph 6)

Page 31: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer

indicates/introduces list (1) of things she has been collecting (1)

Page 32: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

‘In Your Own Words’ Questions

In fact it is possible it was this very atmosphere—this feeling that things were perhaps starting to return to what they had been—which played a significant part in causing me to “lower my guard”. I asked Uncle Philip when we could go, to which he shrugged and said:

Page 33: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Q11. In your own words, explain what Christopher means by “lower my guard”.

(Paragraph 4)

Page 34: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer

be less or not alert for danger/be (more) trusting/be less or no longer worried (about his mother)

OR similar idea (2)

Page 35: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

For much of the way, the carriage followed the route my mother and I usually took to the city centre. Uncle Philip was quiet, which surprised me a little, but I assumed this was perhaps his normal custom on a journey. Whenever I pointed out to him anything we were passing, he would reply cheerfully enough; but the next moment he would be staring silently once more out at the view.

Q12. What explanation does Christopher suggest for his uncle’s silences on their journey?(Paragraph 8)Use your own words in your answer.

Page 36: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer

usual behaviour (gloss of “normal custom”) (1)

while travelling (gloss of “on a journey”) (1)

Page 37: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

The leafy boulevards gave way to the narrow crowded streets, and our driver began to shout at the rickshaws and pedestrians in our path. As we approached the vegetable market, Uncle Philip suddenly rapped his cane to make the carriage stop.

Q13. In your own words, explain how the writer indicates the changing surroundings

along the route towards the city centre.

Page 38: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer

(wide) streets with trees OR greenery (gloss of “leafy boulevards”) (1)

small/busy streets (gloss of “narrow, crowded streets”)/reference to driver shouting to get pedestrians and traffic out of the way (1)

Page 39: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Tone Questions Humorous or light-hearted. This will be shown through

making jokes, and using techniques such as hyperbole (deliberate exaggeration). Its purpose is to amuse the reader. The writer may make fun of yourself as well as the subject being discussed.

Ironic. This tone will be present if a writer wishes to criticise or mock something in a humorous way. This can be done by saying the opposite of what is really meant.

Emotive. This is when language is used to stir up emotions such as anger, pity or sympathy. Strong, emotional word choice is used to create this.

Colloquial or chatty. The writer uses slang, abbreviations and short sentences as if chatting to the reader.

Persuasive or argumentative. Very positive expressions, such as superlative adjectives (‘best’; ‘biggest’) are typical of advertisements persuading you to buy. Emotive language may be used and rhetorical questions may be employed to draw out a certain response from the reader.

Page 40: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Linking Questions

But it is the seas, not the houses or people, that dominates the strand.

Q14: Explain how this sentence is an effective link between the earlier part of the passage and the final two paragraphs.

Page 41: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer

The word ‘but’ is a linking word. It shows that the sea is not going to be discussed in comparison to the people and houses which formed the focus of the previous paragraph.

Page 42: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Yet this violent, uncared-for, desecrated place looks out on the longest, widest and most beautiful of all the reaches of the Thames.

Q15: Show how the word ‘yet’ makes an important turning-point in the writer’s line of thought.

Page 43: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer

‘Yet’ shows change in argument. The writer is going to discuss what has been stated before

Page 44: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Context QuestionsThe building nowadays known as Maes Howe is a

Neolithic chambered cairn, a tomb where, 5000 years ago, they interred the bones of the dead. In its long, long existence it has been more forgotten about than known, but in our era it is open to the public, with tickets and guides and explanatory booklets. It stands, a mere grassy hump in a field, in the central plain of Mainland Orkney. There is a startling collection of other Neolithic sites nearby.

Q. Give the meaning of “interred” and show how the context helped you to arrive at

that meaning.Meaning:Context:

Page 45: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Answer

Meaning: buried (1) Context: ref. to chambered

cairn/tomb/bones of the dead (1)

Page 46: Close Reading Standard Grade Revision. Question Types Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Word Choice- quote and comment on connotations Technique

Final Advice

Do not repeat the question in your answer

Write in your own words as much as possible

Remember you can start answers with ‘Because…’

Manage your time and be aware of the ‘half-way mark’

Know your techniques and question types