If one quote can relate to more than one feature then I will only write about it once in one of the section, for example; 'darkness is cheap, and Scrooge liked it' I would write about this in the part titled 'Scrooge' as it is mainly about Scrooge's character however if I also wanted to zoom in on the word 'darkness' I would do that in 'Scrooge' too instead of in the 'environment' part. Both points will be given together in which I think the quote represents the most.
I might add little hints telling you what you can zoom in on and how to explain the meaning of the word(s).
In my school we use PEEZER paragraphs on Literature and Language papers to help us get as many marks as possible in the time we have. I am aware that there are other structures to achieving the best marks in shortest time possible and I am aware that everyone has different methods they prefer to use, so I am going to write a part about PEEZER paragraphs; how to use them, what the acronym PEEZER actually stands for and examples of PEEZER paragraphs!
I hope to publish these and update them as I continue through the book. Thank you for patience in updates!
YOU ARE READING
Useful quotes with context- a Christmas carol
Non-FictionDoing my GCSE's and analysing the book myself, I'd like to share little bit the meaningful quotes I've discovered individually reading A Christmas Carol, and analysed them to help you and me understand the characters, language and environment! Hope...