What is the relationship between online text and spoken language

What is the difference between a conversion and a social media interaction?
The difference between a conversion and a social media interaction is that because i use slang very often and it can effect you, for example in slang we have abbreviations like the abbreviations for school in slang is skl.
A conversion with a your teacher, parents and an elderly person is formal. But when I’m with my friends i speak slang because we’re the same age.

Has social media made an impact on language, is it for the worse or better?
I think social media has made a bit of a impact for the worse, because we spend a lot of time on social media, so after a while we would get use to it

Sherlock Holmes

Third face: His face looks evil, he looks like he’s going to do something cheeky or bad because of his smile his smile looks evil.

Fourth face: He has a serious face, he looks angry.

Fifth face : He looks shocked, he looks like something embarrassing happened to him

The Itch

Day1: It was a very stressful day at work. A lot of my colleges were not in that day. I was very happy when worked finished but I was really tired so I went home straight from instead of having a drink with my colleges at the pub.
I took cab because it was really late, but this cab was strange, very strange! There were a lot of insects flying around the cab, also the insects were glowing. I was glad when i got home, even though one of the insects followed me.

The Alley Way

It was a gloomy and a boring night, I had nothing to do so I just looked out of my bedroom window. There was an alley way, it was very dark. A man in a suit, with a briefcase walked down the alley way, suddenly the light in the ally flicked then it went out. Then the light turned on after 2 minutes, the man’s briefcase was ontop a pool of blood. I ran as fast as I could to my mum. I told her what happened, she didn’t believe so I took her to my bedroom window, but nothing was there no blood no briefcase, I was shocked. My mum wasn’t happy that I wasted her time so she walked out of her room. I looked at the window again, then blood splattered on the window.

Julius Caesar Essay

In Ozymandias, fate is controlled by the three goddesses (Clotho, Lachesis, Atropos)  we know this because in the poem It says “Tell that its sculptor well those passions read which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things”, this tells us that Ozymandias is like one of the three goddesses (Clotho, Lachesis, Atropos) who preside over the birth and life of humans.

In Julius Caesar, when Cassius turned Brutus against Caesar, we all knew that Caesar was going to die when this happened and this will happen because in act 2 scene 2, Caesar is warned by Calphurnia that he must not go out or he is going to get killed Caesar knew this was going to happen and he knew that he couldn’t cheat death. This makes Calphurnia seem like a goddess of fate because she knew when Caesar was going to die before he did.

Ozymandias task

The structure of a sonnet:

The Shakespearean sonnet has 14 lines divided into three stanzas of four lines each and a final couplet.

The meaning of Volta:

In a sonnet the Volta is the turn of thought or argument. In petrarchan or Italian sonnets it occurs between the octave and the sestet and sometimes between the 8th and 9th or between the 12th and 13th lines of a Shakespearean sonnet or an English sonnet, before the final couplet.

 

Ozymandias task 1

what is the poem about?

the poem is about someone telling a story about a king called Ozymandias.

What sort of ruler was Ozymandias? Did he respect his people? How do you know?

Ozymandias is a mighty king but he didn’t love his people and we know this because it says in the poem ‘My name is Ozymandias, king of kings: look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!’

How do you feel about Ozymandias by the end of the poem?

I feel that Ozymandias is a tyrant  king because he doesn’t care about his people, he rules them in fear and he abuses his power.

EXT: how has time been shown in this poem?

 

summary of act 4 scene 3

Cassius accuses Brutus of having wronged him by condemning Lucius Pella for taking bribes from the Sardians, in spite of Cassius’ letters in his defense. Brutus replies that Cassius should not have written defending such a cause, and Brutus charges him with having an “itching palm” — that is, Cassius has been selling offices. Brutus reminds Cassius that it was for the sake of justice that they killed Caesar, and he says strongly that he would “rather be a dog and bay the moon” than be a Roman who would sell his honor for money. The quarrel grows in intensity as Cassius threatens Brutus, but Brutus ignores his threats. Brutus reminds Cassius of his failure to send sums of gold that Brutus had requested for his troops. Cassius denies this and laments that his friend no longer loves him; he invites Brutus to kill him. Finally the two men are reconciled and they grasp one another’s hands in renewed friendship.

Brutus and Cassius drink together as Titinius and Messala join them. From the conversation that follows, you discover that Octavius and Antony are marching with their armies toward Philippi and that they “put to death an hundred senators,” including Cicero. Messala also reports the death of Portia, but Brutus stoically gives no indication that he already knows of her suicide. He proposes that they march toward Philippi to meet the enemy at once. Cassius disagrees, maintaining that it would be better to wait for the enemy to come to them. This strategy would weary the enemy forces while their own men remain fresh. Brutus persists, however, and Cassius at last gives in to him.

When his guests have departed, Brutus tells his servant Lucius to call some of his men to sleep with him in his tent. Varro and Claudius enter and offer to stand watch while Brutus sleeps, but he urges them to lie down and sleep as well. Brutus then asks Lucius to play some music. Lucius sings briefly, then falls asleep. Brutus resumes reading a book he has begun, but he is suddenly interrupted by the entry of Caesar’s ghost. Brutus asks the ghost if it is “some god, some angel, or some devil,” and it says that it is “thy evil spirit.” It has appeared only to say that they will meet again at Philippi. The ghost then disappears, whereupon Brutus calls to Lucius, Varro, and Claudius, all of whom he accuses of crying out in their sleep. They all swear that they have seen and heard nothing.

Portia is dead by her own hand. She’s swallowed coals, a most painful  and some would say, fitting  way of death. By her suicide she takes on the sins of the men and attempts to expiate them; that is, in the manner of her suicide she, in metaphorical terms, internalizes the painful, rash, hot decisions that have brought the state to civil unrest. But in doing so, she does not contain and remove the difficulties facing Rome. She is ineffective, for this is not a play about what a woman could do, but a play about men and men’s affairs.

The news of her death to Brutus is delayed. For the first one hundred and forty-six lines of the scene, the reader is unaware that Portia’s death is probably the underlying motivation for Brutus’ passionate quarrel with Cassius. What is Shakespeare’s purpose in delaying such news? Impact. The sudden realization of what has happened gives Cassius and the audience a sudden insight into Brutus: the action of the scene and its real motivations and the change in Brutus’ and Cassius’ friendship. Moments of impact such as these offer a pause, a catching of breath that reveals multitudes.

Note that the love that Brutus felt for Portia is transferred to the male, non-sexual sphere in his friendship with Cassius. Loss and betrayal are essential elements of grief, but Brutus, unable to speak these disloyal thoughts against his wife, transfers his feelings to Cassius. It is Cassius who has betrayed him. It is Cassius who leaves him.

Having transferred his grief over Portia into a test of his friendship, Brutus feels that he can go on with the military aspects of his life with stoicism, yet while the feminine is left behind (shown by Brutus expelling the poet because his soft and rounded verses), Brutus still seeks and requires comfort. By banishing thoughts of his wife, Brutus is left with his companions of war. He asks his loyal men to stay with him and looks to Lucius for the calming and expressive quality of music.

They all fall asleep, however, and leave Brutus to face the ghost of Caesar alone. It is not without some irony that, at this point in the play, Shakespeare allows a male character to experience what has so far been a woman’s realm — a prophetic dream. Women, the civilizing influences of art and intuition, have been banned from this world of masculine violence and disruption. In their place, is a man who has put himself in an untenable position by trying to live by reason alone, pushing emotion to one side.

The dream foreshadows and Brutus realizes  that Brutus will die in the battles to come, and that his death will not be the last. The events Brutus initiated with the murder of Caesar will continue to result in more death.

Catch up homework.

Saturday 28th November 2015

Summary of act 2 scene 1

Brutus is in his garden and has decided that Caesar must be killed. His reasons for reaching this conclusion are that Caesar is abusing his power and that has ascended far too quickly. lucius, Brutus’ servant, brings him a letter (planted by Cassius) he has found in Brutus’ private room. The first line of the letter reads, “Brutus, thou sleep’st. Awake, and see thyself”. Brutus interprets the letter as if it were a request from all of Rome to slay Caesar and restore the republic.

Brutus then asks Lucius what day it is, and he informs his master that it is the ides of March, or March 15th. A knock sounds on the door and Lucius leaves to answer it. Alone, Brutus states he has not slept since Cassius first incited him against Caesar.