EXAMPLES OF POETIC DEVICES & FIGURES OF SPEECH

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Jeopardy! Act I. All Characters PlotQuotesLiterary Devices Montagues Capulets
Advertisements

Exam Stuff. Quotes: Know these Why then, O brawling love, O loving hate...cold fire. Earth has swallowed all my hopes…lady of my earth. Compare her face….swan.
Examples  The story of The Tortoise and the Hare teaches people that “slow and steady wins the race”  Little Red Riding Hood teaches not to talk to.
Literary Elements Romeo and Juliet.
Makeup directions: Read all slides and add “Figurative Language” “Puns” and “Oxymorons” to your study guide. Complete both “Song Lyrics” slides (marking.
The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet Review for Unit Exam English 9R Mrs. Hartmann.
NEXT Fig Lang Romeo and Juliet RJ Char ID Odyssey Shakesp eare Team One Team Two Team Three Team Four.
Return Romeo and Juliet Jeopardy People Quotes Who said it? EventsMisc. Figurative Language.
Figurative Language & Literary Devices HOME Click here to explore examples of Figurative Language & Literary Devices. Figurative language – words are used.
“The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne as best I could, but when he ventured upon insult, I vowed revenge.” The Cask of Amontillado By Edgar.
Elements of Writing By: Drew Pilliod.
CharactersPlotQuotes Literary Devices Shakespeare & Elizabethan Theatre
Shakespeare Dramatic Devices and Figurative Language
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt William Shakespeare Quotable Quotes.
Final Exam Review English: Dramatic Irony: -Where the audience knows more than the characters in the story -Example: Act 4 Scene 5 of Romeo.
allusion foil foreshadowing irony (verbal, situational, dramatic) metaphor oxymoron pun.
Poetic Devices in Everyday Life. 1.  metaphor  alliteration  onomatopoeia  symbol  setting  simile  hyperbole  personification.
Literary Terms & Techniques: Focusing on Figurative Language.
What is poetry? What do you think the purpose of poetry is? Do you like poetry? Why or why not? Minimum 5 sentences.
Question and Answer. TRUE or FALSE? Poetry is the only genre of literature that uses figures of speech.
POETRY TERMS An Exciting Language. OXYMORON: joining contradictory terms to make a point or emphasize a phrase... (the cold sun, the kind killer, the.
Literary Terms. Pun A Pun is a play on words, either on different senses of the same word or on the similar sense or sound of different words. Also known.
Literary Devices Poetry Unit - English 3u. Today you Will Learn Oxymoron Pun Alliteration Assonance Consonance Metonymy Paradox Simile Metaphor Personification.
TODAY: Show, Don’t Tell Poetic Devices. SHOW, DON’T TELL: If there's one thing you should remember as you write your story, it's a teacher favourite:
Figurative Language Language used to create a special feeling or event.
Lines are to sentences as stanzas are to paragraphs.
Gr.Poetry Element Teacher’s Example (10 min)Students’ Task (15 – 20 min) 1Rhyme*Dr. Seuss “lf I Ran a Zoo” (p 1) Find all non-words in the poem. Color.
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE BY CONNOR AND WILL. Similes Similes are comparing 2 things using “like” or “as” Metaphors Metaphors are comparing 2 things using “like”
Poetry is the best words in the best places. Poetry begins as a lump in the throat. Poetry is what makes your toes twinkle.
Literary Devices Objective #6.
Figurative Language “Figuring it Out”. Figurative and Literal Language Literally: words function exactly as defined The car is blue. He caught the football.
Parts Of Speech By: Catherine Gracie Mcnease. Simile The turtle was as slow as the sun moving around the Earth.
TODAY’S NEWS  Extended metaphors in “Sinners”  discuss “not about islam?”  “rival conceptions of god” for hw  History of the cold war  begin.
Romeo and Juliet Monologue vs. Soliloquy. MONOLOGUE a speech by one character in a play; intended to be heard by other characters.
Tears of a Tiger Quiz Review.
HoW mUcH dO yOu KnOw tHe BaSic FiGuUrEs Of SpEeCh? START EXIT.
Literary Skills Romeo and Juliet. Figurative Language - 1. Oxymoron Definition- a figure of speech in which two opposite ideas are joined to create an.
Now try it out yourself with a speech from the ‘Balcony Scene’ (Act 2, Scene 2) and/or Convert these quotes into modern/colloquial English and/or add.
Literary Devices.   A figure of speech in which two or more contrasting ideas are placed beside each other, often in parallel grammatical form  The.
Literally vs. Figuratively
Abram: “Do you bite your thumb at us, sire?”
English Subject Terminology
Similes Metaphors Hyperbole personification
List the typical behaviour of a teenager in love
Notes on Drama and Literary Devices for Reading Romeo and Juliet
Hints or clues of events to occur later in the plot
Illustrating Figurative Language
Poetry Hosted by Mrs. Amaya.
Poetic Terms Poem anthology.
Freshmen Q2 Week 5.
SIFT: An AP strategy designed to help you explore how a writer uses literary elements and stylistic techniques to convey meaning and/or theme S: symbol:
Analyzing The Raven.
From Shakespeare’s Romeo & Juliet
Bring your story to life!
Illustrating Figurative Language
Act 3: Dramatic Devices and Figurative Language
Jackie.
Story Questions Literary Terms Historical Context Sonnets Quotes 100
Book Thief Collection:
Hyperbole Definition Example
Rhetorical Devices 2 Hyperbole Understatement Allusion Personification
Act 2 review.
Blank Verse Identifying Blank Verse and Iambic Pentameter in Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet.
Examples found in modern songs
9/6/2017 Wednesday.
ROMEO AND JULIET REVIEW
Figurative Language Review
Final Exam Review English 9:
Im Flying high with Figurative Language!
Test Unit 3: Poetry & Figurative Language
Presentation transcript:

EXAMPLES OF POETIC DEVICES & FIGURES OF SPEECH "ay, the head of the maidsor their maiden heads.“ Pun "what, drawn, and talk of peace? I hate that word as I hate hell.“ Alliteration "oh heavy lightness,bright smoke, cold fire, sick health.“ Oxymoron “the god of my idolatry” Metaphor

“Arise, fair sun, and kill the envious moon,/ Who is already sick and pale with grief.” The all seeing sun, Ne’er saw her match since first the world begun.” Personification "go ask his name. - if he be married, / My grave is like to be my wedding bed.“ Simile “with twenty hundred thousand times more joy” Hyperbole