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Figurative Language

Figurative Language. Figurative language:. Assonance - repetition of vowel sounds All who could should gather wood. At night I like to smoke a pipe. Alliteration - the same sound starts a series of words The cold, clammy hands grasped my neck.

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Figurative Language

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  1. Figurative Language

  2. Figurative language: • Assonance- repetition of vowel sounds • All who could should gather wood. • At night I like to smoke a pipe. • Alliteration- the same sound starts a series of words • The cold, clammy hands grasped my neck. • The bloody watchman told a tale of trouble and torture. • Hyperbole- a great exaggeration • I have a million things to do today. • I’m so hungry I could eat a horse. • Oxymoron- a combination of contradictory words • jumbo shrimp • pretty ugly

  3. Allusion- a reference to a famous person or event in life or literature • Was the ticking package, wrapped with ribbon and bright paper, a Trojan gift? • Casual and confident, the West High team started the game that was to prove their Waterloo. • Analogy- a longer, more detailed comparison of two ideas or situations. • Some people live their lives like a sheet of scrapped paper blown along a windy street; they are carried this way and that with no apparent effort or ability to control their direction. • Onomatopoeia- the sound of the words imitates the original sound • The burning wood crackled and hissed. • The bee buzzed by much too near my head. • Irony- saying one thing but meaning the opposite • Watching it rain, he said, “Lovely day for a picnic.” • The smashed hulk of metal, twisted and shaped into an awkward unlikely angles, lay on its side; one rear wheel spun slowly Ruefully, the man said to his wife, “I’ll bet I finally got rid of that squeak in the dashboard.”

  4. Simile- a comparison in which one thing is said to be like or as another. • My love is like a red, red rose. • The soldiers swept forward like a swarm of locusts. • Metaphor- a comparison in which one thing is said to be another without the use of like or as. • His fear was a prison, stronger than any more visible barricade. • The cat’s eyes were jewels, gleaming out of the darkness. • Personification- giving human attributes to things, inanimate objects. • Time stood still. • The house on the hill waited patiently for the master to return. • Understatement- stating an idea in words less strong than expected. • a. Now, your date is not really a raving beauty.

  5. THE END!!! :o)

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