Make your writing colorful

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Literary Terms for House on Mango Street ©2013 Worldwide Hock.
Advertisements

September,19,2011 Figurative Language Practice
Figurative Language By: K.W. Reed. Simile Ex. The puppy was as cute as a button. Simile – Using like or as to compare 2 unlike things.
By AJ Daley Mrs. J. Johnson language arts 7th period
Elements of Poetry Vocabulary
Figurative Language Simile, Metaphor, Hyperbole, Personification, Alliteration, & Onomatopoeia.
Elements of Style A look at literary devices Figures of Speech  Expressions that are not literally true, but suggest similarities between unrelated.
Examining Figurative Language
Purple Team Rocks!. Types of Figurative Language Adages and Proverbs Alliteration Dialect Hyperbole Idiom Imagery Metaphor Mood Onomatopoeia Personification.
Simile A simile uses the words “like” or “as” to compare one object or idea with another to suggest they are alike. Example: busy as a bee.
Poetic Devices The tools poets use to enhance their poetry.
Figures of Speech Good writers use these!.
Figurative language By: Madison, Liz, and Sheila.
Literary Terms You Should Know You may want to take notes: write the definition, and one example for each term.
Poetry Terms A Review. A comparison using like or as.
Figurative Language Definitions GLE Recognize and understand basic literary terms (e.g., simile, metaphor, setting, point of view, alliteration,
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE. WHAT IS FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE? Definition: Words used in an imaginative way to express ideas that are not literally true Also known.
Figurative LanguageFigurative LanguageFigurative LanguageFigurative Language Figurative Language Made by Scott O’Toole simile metaphor bandwagon alliteration.
Figurative Language Language that uses imagery (pictures in your mind) and figures of speech.
Literary Terms You Should Know In your R/WJ, using the above title, write each term, its definition and one example.
Figurative Language Simile: comparing two things using “like” or “as” He was as fast as a cheetah. Metaphor: comparing two things WITHOUT like or as My.
Figurative Language. Figurative language or speech contains images. The writer or speaker describes something through the use of unusual comparisons for.
Literary Devices: Interesting when you read, useful when you write!
Figures of Speech Figurative Language. Simile What is a simile? A comparison using “like” or “as”. She’s as pretty as a picture. Her eyes sparkle like.
Figurative Language What is figurative language and where do we use it? Why do we use it?
Simile Definition: A comparison using “like” or “as”. Examples:
WORDS AND EXPRESSIONS WITH MEANINGS THAT ARE DIFFERENT FROM THEIR LITERAL MEANING FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE.
Reviewing Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Hyperbole, and Alliteration Learning to Identify and Interpret Each Understanding Figurative Language “Figures.
What is Figurative Language?
A look at literary devices
The Powerful World of Figurative Language
Figurative Language by Ms. Hollnsteiner.
Figurative Language “Figuring it Out”.
Literary Devices: Interesting when you read, useful when you write!
Similes Metaphors Hyperbole personification
Figurative Language simile personification metaphor Alliteration
Figurative Language simile personification metaphor Alliteration
Figures of Speech & Literary Devices
Figurative Language Language used to describe something in a creative way; usually uses at least 1 of the senses.
Figurative Language Figuring it Out.
Figurative Language YAY! All of the fun!.
What do you know about poetry?
Figurative Language Figurative language is language that uses words or expressions with a meaning that is different from the literal interpretation.
Make your writing colorful
Literary Devices: Interesting when you read, useful when you write!
Simile Figurative Language idiom personification metaphor hyperbole.
Figuratively Speaking
Figurative Language It is not LITERAL!.
Figurative Language language that is based on a comparison,
Figurative Language.
Figurative Language Figurative language is language that uses words or expressions with a meaning that is different from the literal interpretation.
Narrative #2.
Figurative & Stylistic Devices
Figurative Language.
Figurative Language simile personification metaphor Alliteration
Literary Devices: Interesting when you read, useful when you write!
Figurative language What is Figurative Language?
Make your writing colorful
Figurative Language idioms simile hyperbole personification metaphor
KNOW YOUR LITERARY TERMS!
Figurative Language Alliteration Assonance Onomatopoeia Simile
Poetry!!.
KNOW YOUR LITERARY TERMS!
What writers use to create word pictures in the mind.
Literary Devices: Interesting when you read, useful when you write!
Figurative Language.
Make your writing colorful
Examining Figurative Language
Literary Terms (Part One).
Rayat Shikshan Sanstha’s S. M. Joshi College Hadapsar, Pune-28
Presentation transcript:

Make your writing colorful Figures of Speech Make your writing colorful

Figures of Speech Figures of speech are words or phrases that are not literal language, that is the words do not mean exactly what they say. Figures of speech are often used for emphasis, freshness, or clarity.

Types of Figures of Speech Simile Metaphor Alliteration Onomatopoeia Hyperbole Personification Idiom Analogy

You are as pretty as a picture. SIMILE A simile is the comparison of two Unlike things using or . He eats like a pig. You are as pretty as a picture. like as

“To be” (am, is, are, was, were) METAPHOR A metaphor is the comparison of two unlike things or expressions, sometimes using the verb “to be,” and not using like or as (as in a simile). “To be” (am, is, are, was, were)

From “A Meditation for his Mistress” METAPHOR He is a pig. “You are a tulip.” From “A Meditation for his Mistress” ~Robert Herrick

ALLITERATION Alliteration is the of initial consonant sounds of neighboring words. Sally sells seashells by the seashore. repetition

ALLITERATION “She left the Heaven of Heroes and came down To make a man to meet the mortal need, A man to match the mountains and the sea, The friendly welcome of the wayside well.” From “Lincoln, the Man of the People” ~Edwin Markham

ONOMATOPOEIA (on-uh-mat-uh-pee-uh) An onomatopoeia is a word that imitates the it represents. The chiming of the bells… The boom of the explosion… sound

ONOMATOPOEIA “Tinkling sleigh bells Clanging fire bells Mellow chiming wedding bells Tolling, moaning, and groaning funeral bells” From “The Bells” ~Edgar Allan Poe

His feet are as big as boats! HYPERBOLE A hyperbole is an or an . = His feet are as big as boats! I nearly died laughing! exaggeration overstatement

The moon looked down at me. PERSONIFICATION Giving human qualities to things that are not human The moon looked down at me.

It’s raining cats and dogs. IDIOM A saying that means something different than what it says It’s raining cats and dogs.

A pen is the weapon of a writer. Analogy An analogy compares two things based on some way in which they are alike. A pen is the weapon of a writer.

Test Your Knowledge!

1.He clattered and clanged as he washed the dishes. TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE! 1.He clattered and clanged as he washed the dishes. Simile Onomatopoeia Hyperbole

TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE! 2. Life is a beach! (A)Metaphor (B)Alliteration (C) Simile

3. “Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.” TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE! 3. “Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.” ~Mother Goose Onomatopoeia Hyperbole Alliteration

4. The river falls under us like a trap door. TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE! 4. The river falls under us like a trap door. Onomatopoeia Simile Metaphor

5. I’m so hungry I could eat a horse! TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE! 5. I’m so hungry I could eat a horse! Hyperbole Metaphor Onomatopoeia

TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE! 6. “Don’t delay dawn’s disarming display. Dusk demands daylight.” From “Dewdrops Dancing Down Daises” ~Paul Mc Cann Onomatopoeia Alliteration Hyperbole

7. I’ve heard that joke a billion times, but it still cracks me up! TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE! 7. I’ve heard that joke a billion times, but it still cracks me up! (A) Simile (B) Metaphor (C) Hyperbole

8. The glass vase is as fragile as a child’s sandcastle. TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE! 8. The glass vase is as fragile as a child’s sandcastle. Metaphor Alliteration Simile

9. The buzzing bee startled me! TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE! 9. The buzzing bee startled me! Hypberbole Onomatopoeia Metaphor

10. She looked at him with fire in her eyes. TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE! 10. She looked at him with fire in her eyes. Alliteration Simile Metaphor

TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE 11. The sun draped its arms around my shoulders Personification Alliteration simile

TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE 12. You look like a million dollars. Personification Idiom Alliteration

13. What figure of speech is this? “The main body of the island rises straight out of the sea, very high into the air, like a castle?”

14.What figure of speech is this? “From far off came the thunder of the surf on the reef.”

15. What figure of speech is this? “There is a sail on his back, not large but terrible to see, for it burns with a white fire.”