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ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View. Is the statement in the video true or false?
ELA Drills, Beginner: Textual Analysis 1. The purpose of the instruction manual was...what?
ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 3. Which sentence in the passage best shows the narrator's point of view on the topic of Chelsea Simpson?
ELA 3: The -Ed Talks 4 Views
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Description:
Today we're going to have a tense conversation. But don't worry, it'll be fun. Check out the video to see why.
Transcript
- 00:05
[Dino and Coop singing]
- 00:13
Today's video is all about...
- 00:15
Ed?
- 00:16
Hmm. [Guy called Bob looking confused]
- 00:16
Like....
Full Transcript
- 00:17
Ed...gar Allen Poe? [Picture of Edgar Allen Poe]
- 00:19
How about....
- 00:20
Ed.... ward the II?
- 00:22
Oh look, we're gonna need a bit more than “Ed” to go off of here...
- 00:25
Today we'll be talking about “e-d,”
- 00:28
As well as “i-n-g.”
- 00:30
Too bad.
- 00:31
Edward the II had a pretty cool beard. [Painting of Edward the II]
- 00:33
We could've done an entire video about it.
- 00:35
Okay!
- 00:35
So by adding “e-d” or “i-n-g” to words, we can indicate the tense of a word. [Coop pointing at a blackboard]
- 00:40
If someone “jumped” for instance, that would suggest we're in the past tense – they [Guy sleeping on a couch]
- 00:44
previously jumped.
- 00:46
If they are “jumping” however, then we can assume we're in the present tense and [Kids jumping in a park]
- 00:50
they're jumping at this very moment.
- 00:52
Now when it comes to reading and saying these words out loud, the “ing” ones are pretty [Coop eating sweetcorn]
- 00:56
darn easy.
- 00:57
All you really do is take whatever word you're saying...
- 01:00
Whether it's “want” or “cook” or “place” and then add the sound “i-n-g” after it.
- 01:04
Wanting, cooking, placing.
- 01:06
But when it comes to adding “e-d” to those words, well, pronouncing it can be a bit trickier. [Magician appears with birds coming from his hands]
- 01:11
Sometimes the “e-d” sounds like “id,” while other times it might sound like “tuh”
- 01:16
or “duh.”
- 01:17
And if we're unfamiliar with a word, it might be difficult to know how to pronounce it's [Guy sat at a computer]
- 01:20
“ed” form.
- 01:22
But don't worry – there's a trick. [Magician makes a rabbit appear from his hat]
- 01:23
Think of the name “Ted.”
- 01:25
Specifically, the letters T and D.
- 01:27
Now if the syllable before the “ed” in your word ends with a T or a D, then you're [Dino pointing at a blackboard]
- 01:32
going to likely pronounce it “id.”
- 01:34
For example, in the words we used earlier, “want” ends with a T, so we know that
- 01:38
“wanted” is pronounced with an “-id” sound.
- 01:41
Want-id.
- 01:42
But since our other words, cook and place, don't end with a D or a T, we don't pronounce
- 01:47
them with that “id” sound.
- 01:48
Cooked and placed.
- 01:50
Those are pronounced with the “tuh” and “duh” sounds.
- 01:52
They sort of just roll off the tongue quickly as opposed to forming their own “id” sound [Words falling from a boy's tongue]
- 01:56
like in “want-id” And that's it!
- 01:59
…Hm.
- 02:00
Maybe we have time to talk about Edward's sweet beard after all… [Girls screaming about Edward II]
- 02:03
Just look at that thing…majestic.
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