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Figurative Language/ Literary Devices
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1. Examine the following: It's been a hard day's night, and I've been working like a dog. - The Beatles My heart is like an open highway. - Jon Bon Jovi like two peas in a pod like Christmas in summer snow was like a blanket my love is like a red, red rose deer ran like the wind YOUR TURN: What do they have in common?
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2. More Examples…. as hungry as a bear as nutty as a fruitcake as quick as lightning as slippery as an eel as solid as a rock as stubborn as a mule as sturdy as an oak YouR TURN: What do these all have in common? More Examples….
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3. Definition Write a definition that applies to the previous examples: NAME these examples.
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4. Examine the following: Patty was a raging tiger when she lost her lunch money. During the night the forest was a dark, frightening battlefield. A heart of stone He has the heart of a lion. You are the sun in my sky. You are the light in my life. She is my East and my West, my compass. YOUR TURN: What do these have in common?
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5. Definition Write a definition that applies to the previous examples: NAME these examples
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Official Definition: A simile is a comparison between two unlike things that have something in common. A simile always uses the words like or as to make a comparison.
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Edit your definition for #3 if necessary. BEST definition:
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Official Definition: A metaphor is a figure of speech comparing two unlike things that have something in common. The comparison is made without the use of like or as.
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Edit your definition for #3 if necessary. BEST definition:
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Categorize: Decide if EACH of the following examples fit the definition of a simile OR metaphor OR neither: 6. Her face was the color of a dirty pillowcase. 7. His voice was like the winter wind. 8. I inched sluggishly along the treadmill of the Maycomb County school system 9. The autumn days became cool and quiet. 10. In spite of our warnings and explanations it drew him as the moon draws water…
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TENOR – Subject of the Comparison VEHICLE – What it is being compared TO
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VOICE something that makes your writing sound uniquely like you the essential, individual thoughts and expression that characterize a speaker
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Describe the “voice”-
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Same words – different voice “Don’t play what’s there; play what’s not there.” - Miles Davis “The notes I handle no better than many pianists. But the pauses between the notes— ah, that is where the art resides.” - Artur Schnabel (1882–1951), German-born U.S. pianist. These two musicians expressed the same thought in their own unique voices
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EXAMPLES of voice in - TKAM The moral voice of To Kill a Mockingbird is embodied by Atticus Finch Scouts voice is innocent and unassuming – the book is mainly written in the voice of the child because she is the narrator. Hanged Factual, informative, attempt at humor The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time Christopher has social issues, “… took it out when I didn’t understand what someone was saying.” PG3 “What in fucks name have you done to my dog.”PG31this woman is very vulgar and bad mouthed.
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ALLITERATION: Repetition of initial sounds CONSONANCE: The repetition of initial consonant sounds ASSONANCE : repetition of initial vowel sounds
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REPETITION Repeating words or phrases within a line or text in order to emphasize their significance.
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SATIRE literary work designed to demonstrate the negative aspects of human folly through the use of mockery (sarcasm and imitation) and derision (scorn, ridicule)
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Irony Occurs when a statement or situation has an opposite meaning or an oddly appropriate twist. “It is easy to stop smoking. I’ve done it many times. A deep sea diver drowning in a bathtub is ironic My house caught on fire because of my stress relief candles.
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Personification A type of figurative language in which a nonhuman subject is given human characteristics. The wind cried in the dark. “…computers can have conversations with people about the weather and wine and what Italy is like and they can even tell jokes” (p. 116). More examples?
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Allusion a brief reference to a commonly known historical or literary figure or work Example: pg. 52, pg. 69-70 She has a Mona Lisa smile He is a real honest Abe
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Oxymoron Combined words that contradict each other Jumbo shrimp Baggy tights Butthead Dry creek Pretty ugly Definitely maybe Little Big Town Front end Giant dwarf
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Pun A play on words that are the same or sound the same, but have very different meanings From The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, p. 167: And the first man said, “Perhaps we should feed him some nuts.” And the second man said, “You’re the one who’s bloody nuts.”
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Onomatopeia Using a word whose sound suggests its meaning or the sound of the action Words or phrases that sound like what they mean BOOM Quack, Oink POW Whisper, slither, SWOOSH, buzzzzzz OUCH! Sizzle. mOOOO ?
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