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ELA 4: Word Choice 222 Views
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Description:
Choosing words carefully is important. You may end up vexing the assemblage of citizens you're conversing with...or you might even just plain bore them.
Transcript
- 00:04
[Coop and Dino singing]
- 00:13
You might be familiar with the expression: "The right tool for the job." [Man fixing a bath tub]
- 00:17
Well, that doesn’t just apply to electricians and plumbers and all those guys whose butt
- 00:21
cracks are always showing.
- 00:22
It applies to you, too! Choosing the right word when you’re writing
Full Transcript
- 00:26
is important when it comes to conveying your intended meaning.
- 00:29
The amount of options you have is almost endless – seriously, have you seen how big dictionaries [Boy reading a dictionary]
- 00:33
are?
- 00:34
But a lot of the time, there will be one word that gets the job done better than the rest. [Hand writes sunny in the blank space of a sentence]
- 00:39
Unfortunately, you can't just go to your hardware store and buy a handy-dandy word kit to keep
- 00:43
in a drawer for when you need it. You'll need to find those words on your own by building [Man struggling to carry a word box]
- 00:47
up your vocabulary.
- 00:48
One great way to build up your vocabulary is by reading. The more you read, the more [Girl reading in the library]
- 00:53
likely it is that you'll bump up against new and exciting word that you might want to use
- 00:57
later.
- 00:57
And it’s fun! Seriously, reading a book is like petting a puppy on a roller coaster. [Boy with a puppy on a rollercoaster]
- 01:01
Well… slightly less dangerous. …And slightly less cute and fuzzy. But it's still fun.
- 01:06
And if you’re looking for some more intensive vocabulary expansion, the dictionary and the
- 01:10
thesaurus are always good bets. [Person types thesaurus into shmoogle webpage]
- 01:12
They even make paper copies of those in case your electricity ever goes out and you have
- 01:16
to live in the stone age…
- 01:20
Want an example? Well today's your lucky day,
- 01:21
we just happen to have one right here! [Example lands on girls head]
- 01:23
Say we're writing a story about a guy who's pretty angry all the time.
- 01:26
We’re thinking the word "angry" is a little bit vague. And, anyway, we have a very particular
- 01:31
kind of angriness in mind: not screaming-at-trees angry… [Boy screaming at a tree]
- 01:34
…but something a bit more subdued. So what do we do?
- 01:38
Since we're looking for a particular synonym for "angry," a thesaurus is our best bet.
- 01:42
We look up "angry," and see if any of those synonyms feel like the best fit. [Synonyms for angry in a thesaurus]
- 01:47
"Vexed" works pretty well, so let's go with that.
- 01:50
But hold on a minute – when choosing the right word, you also have to consider your
- 01:54
audience.
- 01:55
Communication is all about being understood, so if your word choice gets in the way of [Man sat in a doctors office]
- 01:59
that, something's going horribly wrong.
- 02:02
It's great that we figured out that the right word to describe our angry man was "vexed."
- 02:06
But if this story is really for young kids, we're getting a tiny bit ahead of ourselves for four year olds, [Young kids in an audience]
- 02:12
the word "vexed" might be too confusing for them, and we'd probably be better off just
- 02:16
calling the guy "angry."
- 02:17
It’d be a little bit crazy if we have to use a thesaurus to write our story and readers
- 02:21
would have to use a dictionary to read it. The more you read and the better you know [Boy reading a dictionary on the sofa]
- 02:24
your audience, the better you'll be at choosing the right tool for the job.
- 02:28
But, uh… pull your pants up a little while you're at it…let's leave the butt crack [Man's butt blurred while carrying word box]
- 02:31
look to the plumbers.
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