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Description:
AP English Literature and Composition 1.5 Passage Drill 1. In the third paragraph, how does the author foreshadow a coming tone shift?
- Product Type / AP English Literature
- English / Voice and Tone
- English I EOC Assessment / Influence of Traditional Literature
- Media Literacy / Audience-specific Changes in Tone
- Literary Comprehension / Making inferences or predictions about plot, setting, or characterization
- Audience and Author's Purpose / Identifying effect of various authorial choices
Transcript
- 00:09
We know, we know... this passage haunts your nightmares. But feel free to pause and review it yet again if you'd like...
- 00:20
In the third paragraph, how does the author foreshadow a coming tone shift?
- 00:26
I. The author juxtaposes the speaker's excitement with the curious absence of struldbrugs from court.
- 00:32
II. The author shows extreme enthusiasm on the part of the speaker but noticeably excludes any reaction from others involved in the conversation.
- 00:41
III. The speaker admits in hindsight that his reaction was "perhaps a little too extravagant."
Full Transcript
- 00:46
And here are the potential answers...
- 00:52
Foreshadowing. If we recall, that's the deal where one thing happens or is mentioned, and
- 00:58
it gives us a clue about something else that's coming down the pike...
- 01:01
...it's like a movie trailer that gives away far too much of the plot. In other words...
- 01:06
every movie trailer. Okay, so now we're given three possibilities.
- 01:10
Could be just one of 'em; could be a couple.
- 01:12
Any time we get the roman numeral set-up here, we have to remember not to fill in any bubbles
- 01:16
until we've checked 'em all out...
- 01:19
We always have to try I, then II , then... III
- 01:24
The first one suggests that "The author juxtaposes the speaker's excitement with the curious
- 01:28
absence of struldbrugs from court."
- 01:30
Well, sure. We go straight from the author's enthusiasm about struldbrugs... to his mention
- 01:35
that they are notably absent from court.
- 01:38
Hey, maybe they had a good excuse to get out of jury duty.
- 01:41
Oh, okay, wrong court. So if One is true, then we can eliminate choice D.
- 01:45
Roman numeral Two says that "The author shows extreme enthusiasm on the part of the speaker
- 01:53
but noticeably excludes any reaction from others involved in the conversation."
- 01:57
Enthusiasm? Check.
- 01:59
Lack of reaction from anyone else? Check.
- 02:02
Why nothing from the peanut gallery? Hm... mystery, intrigue...
- 02:06
We're on board with Number Two. So with One and Two both true, our answer
- 02:11
must be either B or E...
- 02:13
Let's take a look at Number Three: "The speaker admits in hindsight that his reaction was
- 02:17
"perhaps a little too extravagant."
- 02:19
We've got a direct quote here, so should be pretty easy to fact-check.
- 02:23
Do we see this phrase somewhere in the passage? Sure do -- line 22. And because he is admitting
- 02:30
he was over-the-top... it could certainly be foreshadowing that he was wrong about something.
- 02:33
So all three options work... and our answer is E.
- 02:36
Man... the things some people will do to get out of court...
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