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Figurative Language A Tutorial
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Figurative Language vs. Literal Language
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Why Use Figurative Language? To help readers visualize characters and settings To provide amusement and make writing more interesting To familiarize readers with unknown terms
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Types of Figurative Language Simile Metaphor Personification Hyperbole Alliteration
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Simile A figure of speech that uses like or as to make a direct comparison between two unlike ideas.
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Simile Mom’s Christmas cookies were like lumps of sand. What is being compared? Mom’s Christmas cookies were like lumps of sand.
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Metaphor A figure of speech in which something is described as though it were something else; points out a similarity between two unlike things. Uses the words is, are, was, or were
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Metaphor Full of ups and downs, life is a roller coaster. What is being compared? Full of ups and downs, life is a roller coaster.
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Which is a more powerful comparison, a simile or a metaphor?
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Personification A figure of speech in which a non human subject is given human characteristics.
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Personification The small chair peered out from behind the big desk.
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Hyperbole A figure of speech that exaggerates an idea so vividly that the reader has instant picture.
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Hyperbole I am so sad I could cry a river. Ask yourself: Can someone really cry a river?
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Alliteration The repetition of the same consonant sound at the beginnings of several words in a sentence or line of poetry.
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Alliteration Cindy sent seven cards to her sisters.
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