Transcript File

Context Clues: Hints
an author gives in a
text to help you define
difficult or unusual
words
Context clues will give you a good guess
about what the word means.
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S.A.L.E into finding the
meaning!
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Synonym—Sometimes an unknown word is defined by the use of a synonym.
Example: The wardrobe, or closet, was filled with clothes.
Antonym— Sometimes an unknown word is defined by the use of an antonym.
Antonym clues will often use Signal Words: e.g. however, not, but, in contrast, etc.
Example: He signaled a looey, not a right turn.
Logic—Your own knowledge about surrounding words and the sentence situation may
provide clues to meaning.
Example: He petted the canis minor, and then made her sit up and beg for a bone.
Example—When part of a list of examples or if the unknown word itself provides an
example, these are good clues to meaning. Example clues will often use Signal Words:
e.g. for example, like, such as, etc.
Example: Adventurous, rowdy, and crazy pioneers all found their way out west.
Tip 1:
Reread around the
unknown word
looking for words
with similar
meanings
Example: “His father did not intend to be
cruel, but he was himself a hard-working
man, an early riser, and a swift workman,
and it seemed a natural and necessary thing
to have his sons work. He himself had been
bound out at nine years of age, and he had
never known a week’s release from toil.”
Find key words that may tell you what toil
means.
Guess what does toil mean?
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Tip 2:
Look for signal words
to tell you the
unknown word’s
opposite. Sample
signal words: except,
but, unlike, instead.
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Example:
“Not all commercial websites are
untrustworthy. Indeed, many sites are
reputable sources of information on the
topics they discuss.”
Circle the signal word.
Underline the opposite meaning words.
Guess what does reputable mean?
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Tip 3:
Look for hints from the author –
a definition in the text or
footnotes, restatement of the
idea in a different way.
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Example
“The coulter (cutting part of the plough)
went into the ground.”
Underline the author’s hint for the meaning
of coulter
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Tip 4:
Don’t be fooled by multiple
meaning words
Some words have several meanings. (Craft
can mean “a skill requiring use of the hands”,
“a small boat”, or “clever trickiness”
Go back to the passage and read how the
word was used. Don’t be fooled by the most
common definition of a word.
Example:
“Hillary knew that Big Ed meant to court her
the moment he offered her the first drink
from his diet root beer.”
Guess which of the following definitions of
court is used in the sentence? Circle your
answer.
A.Place where trials are held
B. Surface for playing tennis
C.To provoke or incite
D.To seek the affections or love of a
person
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Tip 5:
Determine the category of
words in a list
You might not know every
word in the list, but the
words will be part of the
same category.
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Example:
“Jeb thought that if he could play the
trumpet, then he could play them all:
trombone, French horn, flugelhorn, tuba,
bugle and cornet.”
Underline the other words in the category
Guess what is a flugelhorn?
A. A type of drum
B. A brass instrument
C. An electronic piano
D. A stringed instrument
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Tip 6:
Use cause-and-effect
relationships to
understand new words.
(One thing happened
because of another or
one thing caused
another.)
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Example:
“George dropped a smoking match in the
forest, and the next day there was a
conflagration.”
Underline what caused the conflagration
Guess what word you’d use for the effect.
Conflagration means
A. A disastrous fire
B. A group of flags
C. A church meeting
D. A harsh warning
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