Posted in English 1103, Scrabble, Teaching

ENG 1103: Toponyms, Part I

On a recent Wordplay Day, some students said that they didn’t remember that place names that aren’t also common nouns aren’t playable in Scrabble. The list that follows includes place names, or toponyms, in the first half of the alphabet that are playable in Scrabble. Learning these words will broaden your vocabulary and up your game.

  • afghan: a wool blanket
  • alamo: a cottonwood poplar tree
  • alaska: a heavy fabric
  • berlin: a type of heavy fabric
  • bermudas: a variety of knee-length, wide-legged shorts
  • bohemia: a community of unconventional, usually artistic, people
  • bolivia: a soft fabric
  • bordeaux: a wine from the Bordeaux region
  • boston: a card game similar to whist
  • brazil: a type of tree found in Brazil used to make instrument bows (also brasil)
  • brit: a non-adult herring
  • cayman: a type of crocodile, also known as a spectacled crocodile (also caiman)
  • celt: a type of axe used during the New Stone Age
  • chile: a spicy pepper (also chili)
  • colorado: used to decsribe cigars of medium strength and color
  • congo: an eellike amphibian
  • cyprus: a thin fabric
  • dutch: referring to each pperson paying for him or herself
  • egyptian: a sans serif typeface
  • english: to cause a ball to spin
  • french: to slice food thinly
  • gambia: a flowering plant known as cat’s claw (also gambier, which is a small town in Ohio)
  • geneva: gin, or a liquor like gin
  • genoa: a type of jib (a triangular sail), also known as a jenny, first used by a Swedish sailor in Genoa
  • german: also known as the german cotillon, an elaborate nineteenth-century dance
  • greek: something not understood
  • guinea: a type of British coin minted from 1663 to 1813
  • holland: a linen fabric
  • japan: to gloss with black lacquer
  • java: coffee
  • jordan: a chamber pot
  • kashmir: cashmere
  • mecca: a destination for many people

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Posted in English 1103, Teaching, Writing

ENG 1103: Sample Final Essay and Annotated Bibliography–“Scrabble . . .”


Posted in English 1103, Reading, Teaching, Writing

ENG 1103: Revisiting “The Competition”

Falconer, Ian. “The Competition.” Writing Analytically by David Rosenwaser and Jill Stephen, 8th edition, Wadsworth/Cengage, 2019. p. 85.

Yesterday in class, we examined Ian Falconer’s The Competition, and as a collaborative exercise, you and two or three of your classmates composed a one-paragraph summary of the magazine cover, followed by a second paragraph that presented your close reading or analysis of The Competition and integrated your interpretation with a quotation from one of the textbook authors’ two interpretations.

Below are three sample paragraphs that I wrote as models for you. The first is a summary of Falconer’s cover. The second and third offer close readings of the magazine cover. Each integrates one of the two interpretations that the authors of Writing Analytically offer on page 89.

Summary

Ian Falconer’s mostly black-and-white New Yorker cover The Competition depicts four beauty pageant contestants, three of whom stand in stark contrast to Miss New York. Her dark hair, angular body, narrowed eyes, tightly pursed lips, and two-piece bathing suit set her apart from the nearly-identical blondes–Miss Georgia, Miss California, and Miss Florida–whose wide-open eyes and mouths and one-piece bathing suits are typical of pageant contestants.

Analyses

The contrast between the raven hair and eyes of Miss New York and the platinum-blonde and pale-eyed contestants from Georgia, California, and Florida in The New Yorker cover The Competition by Ian Falconer suggests what the authors of Writing Analytically present as the first of two possible interpretations: The cover “speak[s] to American history, in which New York has been the point of entry for generations of immigrants, the ‘dark’ (literally and figuratively) in the face of America’s blonde European legacy” (Rosenwasser and Stephen 89).

The self-satisfied expression of Miss New York in The New Yorker cover The Competition by Ian Falconer suggests what the authors of Writing Analytically present as the second of two possible interpretations: “[T]he magazine is . . . admitting , yes America, we do think that we’re cooler and more individual and less plastic than the rest of you, but we also know that we shouldn’t be so smug about it” (Rosenwasser and Stephen 89).

Work Cited

Rosenwasser, David and Jill Stephen. Chapter 3: “Interpretation: Moving from Observation to Implication.” Writing Analytically, 8th edition. Wadsworth/Cengage, 2019. pp. 70-97.


As you continue to work on your final essay and annotated bibliography, review these samples as models for your own summaries and close readings of your sources.



Posted in English 1103, Reading, Teaching, Writing

ENG 1103: Annotating “The Competition”

Falconer, Ian. “The Competition.” Writing Analytically by David Rosenwasser and Jill Stephen, 8th edition, Wadsorth/Cengage, 2019. p. 85.

Posted in English 1103, Scrabble, Teaching

ENG 1103: Irritable Vowel Syndrome, Part II


Posted in English 1103, Reading, Teaching

ENG 1103: “Strawberry Spring” Follow-Up