Tuesday, October 29, 2013

The Hobbit - Chapter 5-6 Discussion

What does the idiom, "out of the frying pan and into the fire" mean in Chapter Six?  Please write in RAD and include your names in your answer.

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

We think the idiom, "out of the frying pan and into the fire" means that they came out from one a small problem and went into a bigger one. For example, at first they just had to escape the cave from the goblins, but then, they came out and had to get away from wolves. -Adrian and Robyn

Anonymous said...

We think the idiom,"out of the frying pan and into the fire," means that one bad problem leads to another. For example, if you are on a pan that's hot and you get free, you think the pain is gone. Although, you just land into the fire and burn, encountering another bad problem.

Phoenix & Bianca

Anonymous said...

We think the idiom,"out of the frying pan and into the fire," means that one bad problem leads to another. For example, if you are on a pan that's hot and you get free, you think the pain is gone. Although, you just land into the fire and burn, encountering another bad problem.

Phoenix & Bianca

Anonymous said...

The idiom "out of the frying pan into the fire" means that get out of some trouble just to get into bigger trouble. Zaddock Ananya Maverick

Anonymous said...

We think the idiom,"out of the frying pan" and into the fire means that when Bilbo was in the goblin cave that means that it was a hard situation and when he gets out of the frying pan he gets into the fire which means the situation is even worse. The situation is worse because now they're getting chased by evil wolves. Cameron and Eva

Unknown said...

We think the idiom,"Out of the frying pan and in to the fire" means you escaped a bad situation, but got into a worse problem. For instance the the group escaped the goblin cave just to run into wolves and a lot more goblins.

Samuel M. Schneider
Jade Calpo
Lara Faustino

Unknown said...

The idiom "Out of the frying pan and into the fire" means that they escaped troubles to get into bigger trouble.For example,they escaped the goblins,but later got trapped by the vicious Wargs that work with the goblins.

Jackson,Shailen,and Jonathan

Anonymous said...

The idiom "out of the frying pan and into the fire" means that you got out of trouble and into more trouble. For example, they escaped from the goblins,but they ran into the wolves and more goblins.

Zach,Isabella,Jamal

Anonymous said...

The idiom "out of the frying pan and into the fire" means that things are going to get worse and they might die.I think it says this because they just escaped the Goblins and now they are being chased by the wolves/howling creatures

Anonymous said...

we think the idiom "out of the frying pan and into the fire" means that you were in a bad situation but then you went into a worse one.For example, when Bilbo escaped the caves he got into more trouble with the wolves
Maggie and Gabby

Anonymous said...

The idiom,"out of the frying pan and into the fire" means that someone or something gets out of trouble only to find more. For example, the dwarves and Bilbo get away and escape from the goblins but soon after, there are wolves and the goblins found them again. Budo Proudneck Brockhouse and
Nidda Rumblebuff (Caleb and Tori)

Anonymous said...

We think that the idiom,"out of the frying pan and into the fire" means that you got out of trouble only to find more later.For example, the dwarves,Bilbo,and Gandalf all escaped the goblins cave (the frying pan) only to be treed by wild wargs and more goblins (the fire).
Kayla and Hannah
(aka) Nill Proudfoot and Jeacla Brockhouse

Anonymous said...

Can you please post the rune letters on the blog for our projects? -Robyn Violanda