📚 LANGUAGE ARTS LESSON PLAN
Topic: The Power Of Words — Germanic vs. Latin Roots & Emotional Language
Grade Level:
7–12 (can be adapted)
Duration:
60–90 minutes
🎯 Learning Objectives
Students will:
- Identify the difference between Germanic and Latin-based English words.
- Understand how historical events shaped English vocabulary.
- Analyze tone differences between word choices.
- Explore how sound affects emotional impact.
- Practice rewriting text for different audiences.
🧠 Warm-Up (10 Minutes)
Write on the board:
- ask / inquire
- help / assist
- belly / abdomen
- buy / purchase
- begin / commence
Ask students:
- Which sounds more formal?
- Which sounds more everyday?
- Why?
Introduce key concept:
English has two main vocabulary sources:
Germanic (Old English) and Latin/French (after 1066).
📜 Mini Lesson: The Norman Conquest (10–15 Minutes)
Explain briefly:
- 1066: William the Conqueror invades England.
- French becomes the language of law and nobility.
- English remains the language of common people.
Result:
English becomes layered.
Germanic = everyday life
French/Latin = law, science, religion, authority
📊 Activity 1: Word Sorting (15 Minutes)
Give students a list of mixed words:
- king
- royal
- freedom
- liberty
- hearty
- cordial
- fire
- flame
- wish
- desire
- holy
- sacred
Students sort into:
- Germanic
- Latin/French
Discuss:
What patterns do they notice?
🔊 Activity 2: Sound & Emotion (15 Minutes)
Write pairs on the board:
- excrement / waste / poop
- fornicate / have relations / (keep this age-appropriate)
- residence / house
- infant / baby
Discuss:
- Which feels clinical?
- Which feels emotional?
- Which feels formal?
- Why do shorter words feel stronger?
Explain briefly:
Hard consonants (k, t, p) often sound more forceful.
Longer Latin words create distance.
✍️ Activity 3: Rewrite For Audience (20 Minutes)
Give this sentence:
“He made a mistake.”
Students rewrite it for:
- A legal document.
- A news article.
- A text message.
- A dramatic speech.
- A children’s book.
Discuss how vocabulary changes tone and power.
🧩 Discussion Questions
- Why do certain words feel “stronger” than others?
- How does word choice influence authority?
- Why might a government document avoid simple language?
- Is “formal” language always clearer?
🏁 Exit Ticket
Students answer:
- One difference between Germanic and Latin-based English words.
- One example of how tone changes meaning.
- One historical reason English has layered vocabulary.
🧑🏫 Extension (Optional)
Advanced students can explore:
- Why swear words are usually Germanic.
- Why legal language prefers Latin.
- How advertising uses short punchy words.
- Why political speeches mix both styles.
📎 Assessment
- Participation in sorting activity
- Rewrite exercise quality
- Exit ticket responses
💡 Big Idea
Language is not random.
History shapes vocabulary.
Sound shapes emotion.
Word choice shapes power.

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