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Chapter 11,12 and 13 Great Expectations


Chapter 11:

Pip goes back to Miss Havisham’s house and Estella greets him at the from gate and takes into a room where Camilla, Miss Sarah Pocket and Raymond are all waiting. Once Pip enters the room these people all start talking about him as if he isn’t there. Estella calls them all up to greet Miss Havisham and they all start talking nicely to Miss Havisham because they want to inherit all of her riches once she dies. Pip is forced to walk Miss Havisham round the room where her wedding banquet was supposed to be held with all the rotten food. Estella lets Pip into the garden where he is confronted by this pale young gentleman who asks for a fight. Pip hits the man first and punches him straight in the nose and the man is on the floor.

Chapter 12:

Pip is constantly thinking about this young man that he punched and went to Miss Havisham’s again the next time after Mr Pumblechook and Mrs. Joe are having a conversation about Pip. This time on his return he tells Mrs. Joe and Joe himself that Joe is invited to Miss Havisham’s house.

Chapter 13:

Joe is dressed all smartly for the occasion of meeting Miss Havisham. Due to the fact that Joe gets nervous when Miss Havisham asks Joe a question instead of responding directly to Miss Havisham, he addresses Pip. Miss Havisham had offered Pip a premium bag for his visits to her house with 25 guineas in a bag and asks Pip to give it to his master. As they leave Pip asks if he is to come to her house again and she replies “no because Gargary is your master now”. When they return to the house Mrs. Joe is astonished by the fact that Miss Havisham has given them all this money. They go to the town hall and was put into an apprenticeship with Joe. They have a dinner in the Blue Boar.

Book Report

Name of book: Shadow

Author: Michael Morpurgo

Plot: There is a little boy called Aman who lives in the middle of a war zone in Afghanistan. He has to live in cave and has a dog that is constantly following him just like a shadow, which is what Aman called her. Shadow then saves Aman by telling him to leave the cave where they are a day before people went round there to kill him. Shadow leads him through the forest to this little village which sadly get attacked by the Taliban and shadow is killed in front of Aman who hides in a building. The American army them save him and that is where the story ends.

Sorry this is so short but the book is around 200 pages long.

Great Expectations Charles Dickens Chapter 10 Summary

Chapter 10: In this chapter Pip returns from Miss Havisham’s house and enters the pub where Joe, Mr Wopsle and this man that we never find out who it is. This man shows the file that Pip took from Joe and that makes him have dreams. He then gives Pip a shilling wrapped in what they originally thought was paper and went home. When they saw this shilling was wrapped in pound notes they try to return the shilling to where they last saw the man. Joe comes back with no success and they leave it in the cupboard until they next see him to give it back.

Story Time

The train journey wasn’t too pleasant. There was too many people for my liking and don’t get me started on the horrible smell of that guy sitting next to me. He must’ve been homeless or something. Do you really think I want to be here? Not really, but there is nothing you can do about it. That is what happens when you work for the WOT. In my job description, I was only told one thing ‘ Go to Long, lost island, meet male, 6ft 3″ on Trunchball Lane’. I arrive at the train station where I see this peculiar person who was sitting by the bench next to Platform 7.

Charles Dickens Great Expectations Chapter 5, 6 & 7 Summary

Chapter 5:

As Pip exit’s through the door, the soldiers come in asking for Joe’s assistants to mend the handcuffs. Meanwhile, Mr Pumblechook presents himself as the man in charge. Mrs. Gargary offers the sergeant some brandy but Mr Pumblechook asks him to take wine instead. Once Joe had fixed the handcuffs the sergeant says that there were 2 escaped convicts they were going to look for at dusk. Joe, Pip and Mr Wopsle go to help. They find the convicts who start an argument amongst themselves. Joe and Pip see the prison ships come and go for the 2 convicts and they head off home.

Chapter 6:

He is relieved about how ‘his convict’ didn’t grass him up while walking home.

Chapter 7:

Pip stands where his parents and his siblings graves are. He goes back home and his ‘parents’ sends him to Mr Wopsle’s great aunt’s evening school. Pip writes a letter to Joe about how much he loves him. The only thing Joe is able to read is his name. Then Joe goes into detail about how his father isn’t a nice guy but still defended him. Why? Joe then talks about how Mrs Joe is a master-mind and he isn’t as she controls him. Mr Pumblechook then tells Mr and Mrs Joe that Miss Havisham wants to play with Pip. Miss Havisham is rich.

Great Expectations Chapter 3 & 4

In Chapter 3, Pip wakes up early in the morning collects the food and the file and the whittles and heads off towards the marshes and the battery. He encounters a man who is another convict and not the same one who forced him to collect these items. He then finds the man and gives him all of the items and the man eats the food. Pip then returns home where he meets Joe and goes to church with him. In Chapter 4, they return to the house to have the traditional Christmas dinner with Mr. Pumblechook, Mr. Wopsle and Mrs. Hubble where they have a go at Pip knowing he cannot respond. Mrs. Gargery asks Mr. Pumblechook to have a bit of brandy and Pip is worried as he filled it with some water.

Great Expectations Summary Chapter 1 & Chapter 2

 

Events: Pip was standing by the grave of his mother and father along with his five siblings. He gets confronted by a man with a leg iron and asks him for a file and whittles. He swears on his life and goes to the house. Joe has a joke with Pip and Mrs Joe (a bully) over hears the conversation and gives Pip medicine for bolting on his food. He gets sent to his room for too many questions. He gets everything he needs, and food, and sets off for the “old battery”.


 

Mr Murray’s Skills and Comaprisons

After Arsenal’s terrible display vs Tottenham we are yet to see the true Arsenal finally deliver in the big games. Arsene Wenger has yet to perform against the big teams and with Jose Mourinho’s team all over the place the spotlight is firmly on Arsene Wenger from the fans to finally deliver the Premier League trophy they’ve all been waiting for since 2003/04 season when they went undefeated for the whole season. Arsenal in the last 4 seasons have only had one very good away win vs the so called “big teams” which was against Manchester City last season. A very good win indeed (at Manchester City) but for Arsenal fans – that I have spoken to – to be content with the draw vs Tottenham at home shows that they don’t expect to do well in the big games and are content to draw against Tottenham their arch rivals. Chelsea (a regular feature in the top 4 in the past few years) usually finish above them but they are out of the picture. Earlier on in the season, Arsenal produced an emphatic 20 minute display vs. Manchester United scoring 3 goals and blowing them out of the park to win the game meaning they can take them on man to man.

As previous results show, the last time Arsenal lost to Manchester City was the 14th December 2013 and this means they are capable of beating them no problem home and away. Arsenal have already missed the first opportunity to go to the top of the tree in time for Christmas by slipping up against Tottenham and Manchester City’s worst performance of the season vs. bottom of the table Aston Villa means they are still top of the table on goal difference. Arsenal will obviously has other chances to go top of the table but I believe that this is their golden opportunity to win the league title this year. If they don’t win the league title this year I don’t see another chance for another 3-4 years due to the other teams needing to improve and spending the necessary money to get the Premier League titles they demand. Unless Arsenal spend the big money on a World Class striker, central defensive midfielder and a centre back they won’t stand a chance with Chelsea and Manchester City’s billionaire owners splashing out cash like it grows on trees.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-3309429/Arsenal-need-grind-results-playing-badly-want-win-league-especially-victory-sent-Thierry-Henry-reacts-Tottenham-secure-point.html

http://www.11v11.com/teams/manchester-city/tab/opposingTeams/opposition/Arsenal

http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/34372498

http://www.theguardian.com/football/2015/nov/08/arsenal-tottenham-kieran-gibbs-premier-league-match-report

English Essay

This essay will explore the relationship between our spoken language and the language we use when we communicate via text messaging. My theory is that the words we write and the way we speak influence each other to the extent that each form of expression influences the other in a continuous loopI am going to show how we use different devices when we speak and text and show similarities and differences between them.

In text communication, we use abbreviations for several reasons depending on who,when and why we are using them. For example, generally, when friends are contacting each other via text at 10 o’clock at night the last thing they would probably want to do is to write the word “you” and instead would write the letter “u”. This is known as a homophone which is used when people are talking informally to each other. A homophone is an abbreviation of the original word but still sounds and means the same. We use it as it is shorter than writing the same word but still means the same. People in text communication usually start off the conversation (particularly amongst young people) with “wuu2”. “Wuu2” means “what are you up to?” and we can only use them when we know the person well and we are familiar with them. This links into how text communication influences spoken language as we have now carried over abbreviations that were originally created through texting (and wouldn’t be here without it) into spoken communication, and we constantly use them day in day out, and sometimes without even noticing.

In spoken language, we use paralinguistic features to add further information that cannot be relayed with just the spoken language. We use this feature when we try to show something that we are emotionally attached to and/or have a very strong opinion on, and no matter how much we shout or try to show what we mean we cannot do it unless the paralinguistic features are added. An example of this is when you are asking your parents for a new item you would show the desperation of how much and badly you want the new thing you would go onto your knees and you use the hand gesture of please by placing your palms together. This therefore, puts the other person in power with a decision of whether you merit it or not and whether the effort of showing the desperation is worth it. Paralinguistic features are essential to spoken language and without them we would then struggle to project the true meaning of our spoken language. This links into how spoken language has influenced text communication as emojis are the paralinguistic equivalent of spoken language’s paralinguistic features.

In text communication and spoken language we use repetition for emphasis in both forms and exaggeration of a point. In text communication, we sometimes use repetition to show something is funny when we use “ha ha ha ha” or “lol” meaning “laugh out loud”. This would imply that should the two or more people in a text conversation be standing face to face the person writing “ha ha ha ha” would be laughing and potentially laughing a lot. The reason why Arbies, my classmate, and myself used repetition is to illustrate emphasis on each of our points. In Arbies’ case when he says, “Look at the table. Look at the table”, he used it to show how low Chelsea were in the league table. Arbies was trying to show his argument was the most convincing and the best non-rebuttable point. These examples could also be an exaggeration as a form of emphasising a point is through exaggeration. It is really easy to use exaggeration to back up or emphasise your point without even knowing. In spoken communication, we use repetition to show the other person that no matter what point you throw back at them, their point will always be correct and there are no counter arguments. This would show dominance in a conversation and leads onto my next point about agenda-setting in a conversation and people showing dominance over one another.

Agenda-setting is the most widely used form of spoken language and the one that people seem to distinguish the least. The reason for this is that it is usually embedded into any conversation and is quite difficult to pick out when you are analysing a conversation between two or more people. Agenda-setting is when a person in a conversation sets the topic of a sentence and can change it whenever he or she feels like it. This is a usually a sign of dominance in a conversation but yet it’s extremely difficult for one person to set the agenda no matter what. Nowadays, conversations amongst the younger generation could potentially be likened to a football match. One team usually dominates more than the other but there are times when the other team starts dominating for periods, and that is what defines a conversation. The more dominant speaker in general starts off a conversation by setting the agenda but that can be quite difficult for the less dominant person acknowledge. When the football is on at the weekend you will get back to school already knowing that will be the topic of debate. On one hand, you have got the person who ends up being less dominant for whatever reason, would have to stand there and bear the points that are being put forward. On the other hand, the person who is more dominant can express themselves and it is able to set the first challenging points across to the other person.

In both spoken language and text communication we use idiomatic phrases to relay a figurative meaning from literal words which do not mean that.  An example of an idiom is when one person is wishing good luck to another person for a competition they would say “break a leg”. The literal meaning is to break your leg but in the figurative meaning of the phrase is to wish someone good luck. In spoken communication idioms were used as a form of hidden messages to say certain stuff to people without others outside of the group knowing what it means. In a certain friendship you would say stuff to each other that would be offensive to people outside that connection but amongst you you would understand that it is not offensive. Same with text communication we use idioms that are only linked with a certain group of people and we are also use worldwide idioms. Yet, idioms which use the same words mean two different things.

To conclude, the words we write and the way we speak influence each other to the extent that each form of expression influences the other in a continuous loopIn spoken language, we use idiomatic phrases to reveal hidden messages, agenda-setting accidentally, repetition to exaggerate a point and paralinguistic features. In text communication we also use idiomatic phrases, repetition and abbreviations to for several reasons depending on who,when and why we are using them. This cycle of events are used all day, everyday and help contribute to today’s society. This loop will go on forever and forever and they will always help to change each other.