1 of 14

Slide Notes

DownloadGo Live

Spelling Term 1 Week Four

No Description

PRESENTATION OUTLINE

SPELLING📚

Photo by utnapistim

FLEECE

COVERING FOR SHEEP OR GOATS SENTENCE:AT THE DEPARTMENT STORE, WE GOT FLEECE JACKETS
Photo by Dave_S.

FLEECE

FLEECE : NOUN PLURAL NOUN : FLEECES
Photo by Dave_S.

FLEECE WORD ORIGIN

Old English flēos, flēs, of West Germanic origin; related to Dutch vlies and German Vlies .
Photo by Alan Cleaver

APPEAL

MAKING A VERY IMPORTANT REQUEST SENTENCE:IN THE COURT HEARING, THE VICTIMS BROTHER REQUESTED THE COURT HEARING
Photo by jkdjulia

APPEAL

PART OF SPEECH :VERB
Photo by jkdjulia

APPEAL WORD ORIGIN

Middle English (in legal contexts): from Old French apel (noun), apeler (verb), from Latin appellare ‘to address’, based on ad- ‘to’ + pellere ‘to drive’.
Photo by KJGarbutt

BEAQUEATH

LEAVE THINGS IN A WILL MAINLY PROPERTY SENTENCE:BILL WAS GERALD’S GRANDSON WHO DIED LAST WEEK AND LEFT HIS MANSION IN BILLS WILL
Photo by louiscrusoe

BEAQUEATH

NOUN
Photo by louiscrusoe

BEAQUEATH WORD ORIGIN

Old English becwethan, from be- ‘about’ (expressing transitivity) + cwethan ‘say’
Photo by popofatticus

colleague

A FREIND OR PARTNER FROM WORK SENTENCE:ALICE AND TILLY ARE COLLEAGUES AT AN ORCHESTRA
Photo by JD Hancock

COLLEAGUE

noun noun: colleague; plural noun: colleagues
Photo by JD Hancock

COLLEAGUE WORD ORIGIN

early 16th century: from French collègue, from Latin collega ‘partner in office’, from col- ‘together with’ + legare ‘depute’.
Photo by Horia Varlan

THANK YOU FOR WATCHING

Photo by Trey Ratcliff