The meaning of the expression is respectful timidity before a new deity. The Adventures of Tom Sawyer



Respectful

Respectful

adj., used compare often

Morphology: respectful, respectful, respectfully, respectful; more respectfully; adv. respectfully

1. Respectful they call someone who treats someone with respect and communicates politely with someone.

Respectful stranger. | He was always emphatically respectful with women.

Courteous, respectful

2. Respectful called a style of communication, behavior, etc., which expresses your respectful attitude towards someone.

Respectful bow, hello. | Respectful speech. | Respectful silence. | Respectful facial expression. | Give the guest a respectful welcome. | Listen to someone with respectful attention.

3. If someone is there, stopped, etc. at (at) a respectful distance from someone, this means that this person does not dare to approach someone for reasons of etiquette, due to timidity, etc.

Stop at a respectful distance from those talking.

4. If anyone holds anyone at a respectful distance, then this means that this person does not allow another person to move into a friendly, close relationship with him.

respectfulness noun, and.

He kissed his hand respectfully.


Explanatory dictionary of the Russian language by Dmitriev. D. V. Dmitriev. 2003.


Synonyms:

Antonyms:

See what “respectful” is in other dictionaries:

    Cm … Dictionary of synonyms

    RESPECTIVE, respectful, respectful; respectful, respectful, respectful. 1. Containing respect, being an expression of respect. Respectful bow. Respectful attitude towards someone or something. To respectfully (adv.) bow to someone... ... Ushakov's Explanatory Dictionary

    REVERENT, oh, oh; flax, flax. Relating to whom n. with respect; expressing respect. P. son. P. tone. P. bow. To address someone respectfully (adv.) At a respectful distance from someone (what) (ironically) 1) not letting anyone close to you or not... Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary

    Adj. 1. ratio with noun reverence associated with it 2. Containing reverence. Ott. Expressing reverence, full of reverence. 3. transfer decomposition Large, significant (of size, size). Ephraim's explanatory dictionary. T. F. Efremova. 2000... Modern explanatory dictionary of the Russian language by Efremova

    Respectful, respectful, respectful, respectful, respectful, respectful, respectful, respectful, respectful, respectful, respectful, respectful, respectful, respectful, respectful, respectful, respectful,... ... Forms of words

    Disrespectful contemptuous... Dictionary of antonyms

    respectful- (respectful) to whom and with whom. ...You tell the groom, if he is respectful to me, I will give him a good fur coat... (A. N. Ostrovsky). He was especially respectful with the owner and tried to please him in everything (Bubennov) ... Control Dictionary

    respectful- honorable; briefly linen shape, linen... Russian spelling dictionary

    respectful- cr.f. almost / calf, almost / calf, flax, flax; almost/more... Spelling dictionary of the Russian language

    Aya, oh; flax, flax, o. 1. Relating to someone. with respect, showing someone respect. P. son. Respectful to old people. Be emphatically respectful with women. // Expressing respect; full of respect. P. bow. P th speech. P th expression... Encyclopedic Dictionary

Books

  • Picasso. Intimate Portrait, Widmaier-Picasso Olivier. “The book you hold in your hands is a portrait of a person with his strengths and weaknesses. Here are his meetings and victories, his companions, children, friends, his entire family; questions tormenting him...

Literary reading lesson. 05/15/2017. Klyuchnik E.Yu.

Topic: Mark Twain. "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer"

Goals: introduce the life and work of M. Twain; practice fluent expressive reading skills and role-based reading; learn to retell the text on behalf of the hero; instill interest in foreign literature; develop memory, speech, thinking.

UUD:

Regulatory: independently formulate the topic and goals of the lesson; draw up a plan for solving a learning problem together with the teacher.

Cognitive: process and transform information from one form to another (make a plan). Build reasoning.

Communicative:learn to answer coherently according to plan. Briefly convey what you read.

Progress of the lesson.

I. Organizational moment

II. Speech warm-up

1. Reading a poem.

I once accidentally

I dozed off during class.

I feel comfortable and pleasant:

I'm sailing on a boat.

And one thing is not clear to me -

Whether in a dream or in reality.

Suddenly out of nowhere

Sounds in the distance:

Shura Volkova, come to the board!

  • Read (buzzing reading, whispering, loudly, with an intonation of surprise, with an angry intonation, expressively).

2. Vocabulary work.

Explain the meaning of the word "inadvertently." Choose synonyms for it.(Accidentally, involuntarily, accidentally, unintentionally, unintentionally, by chance.)

III. Familiarization with life and work of M. Twain

1. Introductory conversation.

  • Today we will look at an excerpt from the story “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer”. Do you know her?
  • Who is the hero of this work?
  • Have you heard anything about the author?

2. Teacher's story about the writer.

Mark Twain (pseudonym of Samuel Langhorne Clemens) liked to say that he took up literature by accident. Maybe he was joking, but only Samuel Langhorne Clemens became the writer Mark Twain really quite late, having previously changed many occupations.

He was born into the family of a provincial lawyer and spent his childhood in the small town of Hannibal on the banks of the Mississippi. The family was poor, the father died when the boy was 12 years old. Without graduating from school, Sam became an apprentice at a printing house, worked as a typesetter, and then learned the craft of a pilot on the Mississippi. At the outbreak of the Civil War, Clemens, out of a love of adventure, volunteered for the Southern army, but did not serve long. Then he looked for silver in Nevada, but turned out to be an unsuccessful prospector and, in search of income, began to write in local newspapers. During the “gold rush” in California, he no longer looked for gold, but only wrote for newspapers and began to gain some literary fame with his stories. When the writer Mark Twain appeared, Samuel Clemens was thirty.

Then there was reporting work, trips, appearances with “lectures” - public readings of his own humorous stories, the first book, marriage to the daughter of a wealthy entrepreneur, great literary successes, travel around the world, the publication of one novel after another, a large house in Hartford, world fame, two decades of prosperity and wealth. In those years, Twain founded a publishing house that brought good income, invested a lot of money in inventions - a steam generator, Page's typesetting machine - partly out of love for technology, partly from the desire to become a real capitalist, get rich, and reliably provide for his family.

And then there was the bankruptcy of the publishing house, the loss of money invested in inventions, debts, a trip around the world by a middle-aged writer with public readings, new books, the death of a daughter, poignant political pamphlets, the death of his wife, new pamphlets, the death of another daughter...

Mark Twain wrote a lot of books of various genres and of various literary merits. He left more than 25 volumes of works.

We will get acquainted with one of them today.

IV. Working on the content of the passage

  1. Reading passage by proficient reading students.
  2. Primary perception of the text.

What are your impressions of what you read?

3. Vocabulary work.

  • Choose synonyms for the words: smartly(briskly, quickly), sit (sit, sit (colloquial)), curiosity (inquisitiveness, interest), startling (amazing, wondrous, stunning, stunning, striking, dizzying, mind-blowing).
  • Choose antonyms for the words: furtively(openly, obviously), confused (resourceful).

Explain the expression “respectful timidity before a new deity...”.(He was shy in front of the new girl whom he had fallen in love with.)

4. Analysis of the following passage.

  • What is Mark Twain's work about?
  • How can you title this passage?
  • From whose perspective is the story being told?
  • What details convince you that the action took place many years ago and in another country?
  • What surprised you or interested you?
  • What have you learned about Tom?
  • How can you describe him?(Prankster, cunning, inventor, loves adventures, quick-witted, inquisitive, persistent, etc.)
  • What do you think of Becky? Why?
  • What tricks did Tom Sawyer come up with to make friends with Becky Thatcher?

2. Working with illustrations in the textbook.

  • How did the artist depict the children?
  • Did your idea match the illustrator's?

V. Lesson summary

Do you think love exists at this age? Do you know this feeling?

Homework:prepare a retelling of the text on behalf of Tom Sawyer


What parts did you divide the passage into?
Here is an approximate division of the fairy tale into parts.

Part XIII. She became a beautiful girl

To the words: “He ordered a man’s suit to be sewn for her so that she could accompany him on horseback,” p. 184.

XIV Part. Life in the Palace

To the words: “Day by day the prince became attached to the little mermaid more and more,” p. 186.

XV part. Relationship with the prince

Until the words: “But then they began to say that the prince would marry the lovely daughter of a neighboring king,” p. 187.

XVI part. Prince meets princess

Until the words: “On a clear moonlit night, when everyone except the helmsman was asleep...”, p. 188.

XVII part. The Little Mermaid learns about the prince's decision

Until the words: “That same evening the prince and his young wife were supposed to sail to the prince’s homeland...”, p. 189.

XVIII part. Last night

1 Before the words: “The little mermaid leaned on the handrails and, turning | facing the east, began to wait for the first ray of sun...,” p. 191.

XIX part. Meeting with the sisters

Before the words: “The Little Mermaid lifted the purple curtain of the tent and saw that the young wife’s head was resting on the chest of the 1st prince,” p. 191.

XX part. The death of the little mermaid

III. Retelling the last part of the text

Part IV. Continuing work on the fairy tale

1. Conversation about the heroes of the fairy tale.

Distribute the fairy tale characters into groups. Who can be classified as positive heroes, and who can be classified as negative?

Name the neutral characters in the fairy tale.

Who are the helping heroes in the fairy tale?

Why did the little mermaid decide to say goodbye to her underwater life and become human?

Is it anyone's fault that her dreams didn't come true?

Why is the end of the fairy tale sad and joyful at the same time?

2. Compiling a story about the little mermaid.

Write a story about the little mermaid. What was she like?

How do you feel about the little mermaid? How does the author feel about her?

V. Physical education minute

VI. Working on proverbs and sayings

Read the proverbs and sayings and explain their meaning:

True love neither burns in fire nor drowns in water. There are no barriers to love.

And the fierce beast is tamed with patience and love. It is better to suffer and love than to live in the world without loving. All ages are submissive to love.



VII. Lesson Summary

What does this fairy tale teach?

Present your illustrations for a passage from a fairy tale that particularly touched you.

Lessons 95-96. Mark Twain. "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer"

Goals: introduce the life and work of M. Twain; practice fluent expressive reading skills and role-based reading; learn to retell the text on behalf of the hero; instill interest in foreign literature; develop memory, speech, thinking.

Lesson progress 1

I. Organizational moment

II. Speech warm-up

1. Reading a poem.

I once accidentally dozed off during class. I feel comfortable and pleasant: I’m floating on a boat. And one thing is not clear to me - What’s in a dream, what’s in reality. Suddenly, out of nowhere, it is heard in the distance:

Shura Volkova, come to the board!

Read (buzz reading, whispering, loudly, with an intonation of surprise, with an angry intonation, expressively).

2. Vocabulary work.

Explain the meaning of the word "inadvertently." Pick up si
anonymous names for him. (Accidentally, involuntarily, accidentally, unintentionally, not
intentionally, accidentally.)

III. Familiarization With life and work of M. Twain

1. Introductory conversation.

Today we will look at an excerpt from the story “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer”. Do you know her?

Who is the hero of this work?

2. Teacher's story about the writer.

Mark Twain (pseudonym of Samuel Langhorne Clemens) liked to say that he took up literature by accident. Maybe he was joking, but only Samuel Langhorne Clemens became the writer Mark Twain really quite late, having previously changed many occupations.

He was born into the family of a provincial lawyer and spent his childhood in the small town of Hannibal on the banks of the Mississippi. The family was poor, the father died when the boy was 12 years old. Without finishing school, Sam went to work as an apprentice at a printing house

as a typesetter, then learned the craft of a pilot on the Mississippi. At the outbreak of the Civil War, Clemens, out of a love of adventure, volunteered for the Southern army, but did not serve long. Then he looked for silver in Nevada, but turned out to be an unsuccessful prospector and, in search of income, began to write in local newspapers. During the “gold rush” in California, he no longer looked for gold, but only wrote for newspapers and began to gain some literary fame with his stories. When the writer Mark Twain appeared, Samuel Clemens was thirty.

Then there was reporting work, trips, appearances with “lectures” - public readings of his own humorous stories, the first book, marriage to the daughter of a wealthy entrepreneur, great literary successes, travel around the world, the publication of one novel after another, a large house in Hartford, world fame, two decades of prosperity and wealth. In those years, Twain founded a publishing house that brought good income, invested a lot of money in inventions - a steam generator, Page's typesetting machine - partly out of love for technology, partly from the desire to become a real capitalist, get rich, and reliably provide for his family.

And then there was the bankruptcy of the publishing house, the loss of money invested in inventions, debts, a trip around the world by a middle-aged writer with public readings, new books, the death of a daughter, poignant political pamphlets, the death of his wife, new pamphlets, the death of another daughter...

Mark Twain wrote a lot of books of various genres and of various literary merits. He left more than 25 volumes of works.

We will get acquainted with one of them today.

IV. Physical education minute

V. Working on the content of the passage

1. Reading of the passage by students who are good readers.

2. Primary perception of the text.

What are your impressions of what you read?

3. Vocabulary work.

Choose synonyms for the words: smartly (lively, quickly) sit down (sit, sit (colloquial)), curiosity (inquisitiveness, interest), startling (amazing, wondrous, stunning, stunning, striking, dizzying, mind-blowing).

Choose antonyms for the words: furtively (openly, obviously) confused (resourceful).

Explain the expression “respectful shyness before but
your deity..." (He was shy in front of the new girl, but
whom I managed to fall in love with.)

VII. Lesson Summary

Which writer did we meet in class today?

What new things have you learned about him?

Lesson progress 2

I. Organizational moment

II. Speech warm-up

1. Reading a poem.

Here is a new day and a new hour, a new literature lesson. But an old friend is visiting us: A prankster, a rogue, a troubled pirate.

Read "bird market".

Read (with a questioning intonation, with an affirmative one, with an angry one, with a cheerful one, whispering, loudly, patteringly, expressively).

2. Vocabulary work.

Explain the meaning of the word "poor". (Nimble, brave.)

III. Reading passage

1. Expressive reading.

2. Reading by roles (p. 197-199).

IV. Physical education minute

V. Working on the content of the passage

1. Analysis of the passage.

What is Mark Twain's work about?

How can you title this passage?

From whose perspective is the story being told?

What details convince you that the action took place many years ago and in another country?

What surprised you or interested you?

What have you learned about Tom?

How can you describe him? (Prankster, cunning, inventor, loves adventures, quick-witted, inquisitive, persistent, etc.)

What do you think of Becky? Why?

What tricks did Tom Sawyer come up with to make friends with Becky Thatcher?

2. Working with illustrations in the textbook.

How did the artist depict the children?

Did your idea match the illustrator's?

VI. Lesson Summary

Do you think love exists at this age? I know
Do you like this feeling?

Homework: prepare a retelling of the text on behalf of Tom Sawyer.

When someone, daring, began to ask him questions, and he began to listen with dull attention, the timidity of the crowd gave way to a feeling of awkwardness.

A. Saint-Exupéry, “Military Pilot”

The lion, although defeated, filled him with timidity.

A. Saint-Exupery, “Night Flight”

And so, on the eve of a decisive battle, overcome by pride and timidity, I went to Guillaume.

A. Saint-Exupéry, “Planet of People”

Silence and twilight reigned under the shade of tall, branchy trees, between which Berenice walked with secret timidity.

T. Dreiser, “Trilogy of Desire. Stoic"

But as soon as she was left alone, she immediately lost courage, although timidity was by no means characteristic of her.

At ten o'clock in the morning he called her on the phone and began to make fun of her indecisiveness, timidity, and the capriciousness of her moods.

T. Dreiser, “Trilogy of Desire. Titanium"

Lilian responded to his ardor with that teasing, affectionate timidity that always so delighted him; but now this timidity was colored by the desire communicated to her by Frank.

T. Dreiser, “Trilogy of Desire. Financier"

Kuzma looked up from his book and looked at him with surprise and timidity over his pince-nez, as if at some kind of steppe animal whose presence was strange in the room.

I.A. Bunin, "Village"

And she, without any timidity, walked ahead of me along the steep and cramped stone stairs of this house, leaning back slightly, freely tensing her writhing body, so exposing her right hand, which was holding a circle of cheese in canvas on her head on a cube scarf, that the black hair of her armpits was visible.

I.A. Bunin, "Dark Alleys"

She laughed, but her laughter suddenly stopped - and she remained motionless, as if her own words had struck her, and in her eyes, usually so cheerful and courageous, flashed something similar to timidity, even similar to sadness.

I.S. Turgenev, “Spring Waters”

When Fedya was sixteen years old, Ivan Petrovich considered it his duty to instill in him contempt for the female sex in advance - and the young Spartan, with timidity in his soul, with the first fluff on his lips, full of juices, strength and blood, was already trying to seem indifferent, cold and rude.

For five whole days he struggled with his timidity; On the sixth day, the young Spartan put on a brand new uniform and placed himself at the disposal of Mikhalevich, who, being his own man, limited himself to combing his hair - and both went to the Korobins.

I.S. Turgenev, "The Noble Nest"

But the feeling of timidity that had taken possession of him soon disappeared: in the general, the good nature innate to all Russians was further aggravated by that special kind of friendliness that is characteristic of all slightly soiled people; The general’s wife somehow soon faded away; As for Varvara Pavlovna, she was so calm and self-confidently affectionate that anyone in her presence immediately felt at home; moreover, from her entire captivating body, from her smiling eyes, from her innocently sloping shoulders and pale pink hands, from her light and at the same time, as if tired, gait, from the very sound of her voice, slow, sweet, there was a breath of elusiveness, like a thin a smell of insinuating charm, soft, still bashful, bliss, something that is difficult to convey in words, but which touched and aroused - and, of course, it was no longer timidity that aroused.

I.S. Turgenev, "The Noble Nest"

But sometimes, under the influence of favorable circumstances, accidents, which I, however, are neither able to determine nor foresee, my timidity disappears completely, as now; For example.

Eternal worries, a painful struggle with cold and hunger, the melancholy despondency of his mother, the troublesome despair of his father, the gross oppression of the owners and the shopkeeper - all this daily, continuous grief developed in Tikhon an inexplicable timidity: at the mere sight of his boss, he trembled and froze, like a caught bird.

I.S. Turgenev, “Notes of a Hunter”

Due to the meekness and timidity of his disposition, he showed nothing except the most tender regret for his friend and painful bewilderment.

I.S. Turgenev, “Notes of a Hunter”

He approached her timidly, but again her smile reassured him.

But, despite this caution, Vronsky often saw the child’s attentive and perplexed gaze fixed on him and the strange timidity, unevenness, sometimes affection, sometimes coldness and shyness in this boy’s attitude towards himself.

L.N. Tolstoy, Anna Karenina

He despised the nobility and considered most nobles to be secret serf-owners who did not express themselves out of timidity.

L.N. Tolstoy, Anna Karenina

Stepan Arkadyevich made an effort and overcame the timidity that had come over him.

L.N. Tolstoy, Anna Karenina

Of medium height, stocky, with a nimble gait, Mikhailov, in his brown hat, olive coat and narrow trousers, while they had long been wearing wide trousers, especially by the ordinariness of his broad face and the combination of an expression of timidity and a desire to maintain his dignity, made an unpleasant impression.

L.N. Tolstoy, Anna Karenina

He was undoubtedly a kind fellow, and Levin felt sorry for him and ashamed of himself, the owner of the house, when he noticed timidity in Vassenka’s gaze.

L.N. Tolstoy, Anna Karenina

And such was Natasha, with her surprise, joy and timidity and even mistakes in the French language.

L.N. Tolstoy, “War and Peace. Volume 2"

One thing she saw was that the former stern and decisive expression on his face was replaced by an expression of timidity and submission.

L.N. Tolstoy, “War and Peace. Volume 3"

In the squeaky tone of his voice and in the spot-like fresh blush that came over the young face of this officer as he spoke, one could see this sweet young timidity of a man who is constantly afraid that his every word comes out wrong.

L.N. Tolstoy, Sevastopol Stories

The laugh that swept through the class seemed to confuse Tom; in fact, it was not embarrassment, but respectful timidity before the new deity and fear mixed with the joy that such extraordinary luck promised.

M. Twain, “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn. Part 1"

That is why, with timidity and hidden reluctance, Panteley Prokofievich went for the first time to get married.

M.A. Sholokhov, "Quiet Don"

Looking at these people rushing along the pavement with such ease, I feel an involuntary timidity.

M.E. Saltykov-Shchedrin, “Diary of a provincial in St. Petersburg”

Arm in arm, they wandered in a line along the street and, in order to forever banish the spirit of timidity from their midst, they shouted at the top of their lungs.

Moreover, although he was timid and blushed in the presence of women, underneath this timidity lurked that intense voluptuousness that loves to first irritate itself and then steadily strives towards the outlined goal.

M.E. Saltykov-Shchedrin, “The History of a City”

What does this fairy tale teach?

Present your illustrations of a passage from a fairy tale that particularly touched you.

_______________________________

Topic: M. Twain “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer”

Goals: introduce the life and work of M. Twain; practice fluent expressive reading skills and role-based reading; teach to compare heroes and their actions, retell the text on behalf of the hero; instill interest in foreign literature; develop memory, speech, thinking.

Planned results: subject: knowledge of foreign literature, determination of its features, compilation of retellings of the most interesting episodes of works on behalf of the main characters, independent compilation of stories about the hero using the author’s text; meta-subject: P - formulating the educational task of the lesson, planning together with the teacher activities to study the topic of the lesson, evaluating one’s work in the lesson, P - expressing one’s opinion about the work read, evaluating the actions of the characters, the ability to use the list of recommended literature to choose a book, K - answering questions textbook based on works of foreign literature, discussion in pairs of answers to textbook questions, proof of your point of view, division of powers in the group when planning group work; personal: the formation of a respectful attitude towards other opinions, the history and culture of other peoples, the ability to compare the actions of heroes of literary works with one’s own actions, and to comprehend the actions of heroes.

Equipment: multimedia projector (if possible), book exhibition, portrait of M. Twain, video recording (excerpt) of a feature film based on the work of the same name.

Lesson progress

I. Organizational moment

II. Speech warm-up

Read it in a buzzing manner.

I once accidentally

I dozed off during class.

I feel comfortable and pleasant:

I'm sailing on a boat.

And one thing is not clear to me -

Whether in a dream or in reality.

Suddenly out of nowhere

It is heard in the distance: -

Shura Volkova, come to the board!

A. Barto

Read in a whisper, loudly, with an intonation of surprise, with an angry intonation, expressively.

Explain the meaning of the word "inadvertently." Find synonyms for it. (Accidentally, involuntarily, accidentally, unintentionally, unintentionally, by chance.)

III. Work on the topic of the lesson

Getting to know the life and work of M. Twain

Today we will get acquainted with an excerpt from the story “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer”. Is she known to you?

Who is the hero of this work?

IV. Physical education minute

V. Work on the topic of the lesson Work on an excerpt from “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer”(Reading the passage on pp. 194-200 of the textbook by students who read well.)

What are your impressions of what you read?

Choose synonyms for the words.

BOYKO- (briskly, quickly).

SEAT- (sit, sit).

CURIOSITY- (inquisitiveness, interest).

AMAZING - (amazing, wondrous, stunning,

stunning, striking, dizzying, mind-blowing).

Choose antonyms for the words.

STEALTHY - (openly, obviously).