Understanding Idioms and Their Meanings

Understanding Idioms and Their Meanings

Assessment

Interactive Video

English, Education

4th - 6th Grade

Hard

Created by

Amelia Wright

FREE Resource

This video tutorial explains the concept of idioms, which are phrases that don't mean exactly what the words say. It emphasizes the importance of context clues in understanding idioms and provides an example with the idiom 'take someone under one's wing'. The tutorial outlines steps to interpret idioms: visualizing the idiom, using context clues, and drawing a picture to aid understanding.

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10 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What is the main focus of the lesson?

Memorizing idioms without context

Understanding the literal meaning of words

Learning the meaning of the idiom 'to take someone under one's wing'

Translating idioms into foreign languages

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Why can't idioms be understood by looking at each word individually?

Idioms are always about animals

Idioms are mathematical equations

Idioms have a unique meaning understood only by speakers of that language

Idioms are always in a foreign language

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What does the idiom 'it rained cats and dogs' mean?

Animals were playing in the rain

It was a sunny day

It rained very hard

Cats and dogs fell from the sky

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What does the idiom 'to take someone under one's wing' imply?

To compete with someone

To fly with someone

To help and nurture someone

To ignore someone

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

In the example, what does Aaron do for Nate?

Takes him to a bird sanctuary

Competes with him

Teaches him how to run the bubble machine

Ignores him

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What is a good context clue in the sentence about Aaron and Nate?

The word 'bubble'

The name 'Aaron'

The word 'machine'

The phrase 'showed him how'

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What is the first step in understanding an idiom?

Translate it into another language

Ignore the idiom completely

Ask someone else for the meaning

Imagine the exact words in detail

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