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LESSON NOTE ON JSS3 ENGLISH LANGUAGE FOR THIRD TERM

English Language Lesson Note For JSS3 (Third Term) 

 

Scheme Of Work

Week One: Revision: English Structure, Narrative Essay, and Monopthongs

Week Three: Review of Verbs/Adverbs, Argumentative Essay and Diphthongs

Week Four: Review of Adjectives/Prepositions and Features of Letters (Formal, Informal)

Week Five: Revision of Last Term’s Work

lesson note on English language for jss3

Below are the 2022 English language lesson notes for jss3 third term

 

lesson note on English language for jss3

Week One & Two

Contents:

  • English Structure: Revision of Noun and Pronoun
  • Narrative Essay
  • Monophthongs

A. English Language: Revision of Nouns and Pronouns

Noun

A Noun is a name of a person, animal, place or things.

There are four kinds of nouns:

  1. Common Nouns
  2. Proper Nouns
  3. Concrete Nouns
  4. Abstract Nouns

a. Common Nouns

common noun names a class of similar things (chair, box), and not an individual member of a specified group of people or things. We do not capitalize the first letter of a common noun unless it is the first word in a sentence. To learn more, click here 

 Week Three

Contents:

  • Review of Verbs and Adverbs
  • Argumentative Essay
  • Diphthongs
  • Figure of Speech

A. Review of Adverbs and Verbs

An adverb is the part of speech (or word class) that is primarily used to modify a verb, adjective, or another adverb. Adverbs can also modify prepositional phrases, subordinate clauses, and complete sentences. In other words, adverbs tell us in what way someone does something. Adverbs can modify verbs (here: drive), adjectives or other adverbs.

POSITIONS OF ADVERB

An adverb that modifies an adjective (“quite sad”) or another adverb (“very carelessly”) appears immediately in front of the word it modifies. An adverb that modifies a verb is generally more flexible: it may appear before or after the verb it modifies (“softly sang” or “sang softly“), or it may appear at the beginning of the sentence (“Softly she sang to the baby”). The position of the adverb may have an effect on the meaning of the sentence.

To learn more, click here

lesson note on English language for jss3

 Week Four

Contents:

  • Review of Adjectives and Prepositions
  • Features of Letters

A. Grammar: Prepositions and Adjectives

Preposition

preposition is a word that precedes a noun (or a pronoun) to show the noun’s (or the pronoun’s) relationship to another word in the sentence. (The word preposition comes from the idea of being positioned before. It is not true to say that a preposition always precedes a noun or a pronoun, but it does most of the time.) Prepositions are mostly single words used before a pronoun, noun, noun phrase, or verb to express their relationship with the rest of the sentence. They are used to show when something happens (prepositions of time), where something happens (prepositions of place), or where something is going (prepositions of movement).  To learn more, click here

 Week Five and more

Topic: Revision of Last Term’s Work

 

Teachers and Students are expected to do a revision of last term’s work.

To learn more, click here 

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