Metaphors Similes Personification

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Go Figure! Figurative Language.
Advertisements

Go Figure! Figurative Language Recognizing Figurative Language The opposite of literal language is figurative language. Figurative language is language.
Greenfield Elementary
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis 1/09 Poetry Unit: TP-CASTT - Blume 1 repetition! onomatopoeia!
Figurative Language (Idioms and Hyperbole)
Go Figure! Figurative Language Grades 6-8 Recognizing Figurative Language The opposite of literal language is figurative language. Figurative language.
Figurative Language Grades 6-8
Go Figure! Figurative Language.
Go Figure! Figurative Language Grades 6-8 Recognizing Figurative Language The opposite of literal language is figurative language. Figurative language.
Figurative Language Ms. Wile 6th Grade Language Arts
Figurative Language Grades 6-8
BELL WORK: 1. Put homework in planner. metaphor sheet
EQ 9 & 10. “The first baseman hit a bomb over the fence!” “The outfielder threw a frozen rope to the catcher.” “The pitcher was like a machine throwing.
Identifying Similes and Metaphors. Similes and Metaphors Figurative language helps the reader to visualize what is happening – Similes and metaphors are.
 Some figurative language asks us to stretch our imaginations, finding the likeness in seemingly unrelated things.  Simile is a comparison of two things.
Appreciating Narrative Writing
Similes and Metaphors Grade 3 Bryn Siegelman.
Learning Objective : Today we will apply knowledge of different figurative languages to determine the meaning of words and phrases.
Notebook Check Advanced Reading. Bellwork 10/27/2014 Directions: Start on a new page in your notebook and write “Bellwork 10/27/2014”. Then copy down.
Events are told by a character in the story The narrative will read, “I sat at my wooden desk, looking up at that huge circle with its eternally trapped.
Voice Lessons.
What are the SIX types? Simile Metaphor Personificati on Hyperbol e Allitera- tion Idiom.
Figurative Language PowerPoint
Figurative Language. How Do Authors Use Words  Literal Language: The words an author uses mean exactly what would be in the dictionary.  Ex. The river.
Elements of Style Literary Devices Ch. 5. Reading Standard 3.6 Identify significant literary devices that define a writer’s style, and use those elements.
Poetry Vocabulary Visit
Go Figure! Recognizing Figurative Language The opposite of literal language is figurative language. Figurative language is language that means more than.
Go Figure! Figurative Language Recognizing Figurative Language The opposite of literal language is figurative language. Figurative language is language.
What are the SIX types? Simile Metaphor Personific ation Hyperbol e Alliteratio n Idiom.
Figurative Language and Sound Devices
Why use FIDDS? FIDDS are the basic elements of a writer’s style.
Go Figure! Figurative Language Grades 6-8. Recognizing Figurative Language The opposite of literal language is figurative language. Figurative language.
Figurative Language Maci Barker. Simile Simile: comparing 2 unlike things using like or as Example: That ballerina is like a graceful flamingo happily.
CSIntervention Figurative Language RW1.5 (5 th Grade) Understand and explain the figurative and metaphorical use of words in context. (4 questions on CST)
What is Figurative Language? Whenever you describe something by comparing it with something else, you are using figurative language!Whenever you describe.
Figurative Language Figurative language is what we call figures of speech, any language that is not meant to be taken literally.
Primetime Figurative Language List two kinds of figurative language and tell what it means. Give an example of each one.
Figurative Language. Authors use figurative language to enrich their poetry. They use it to compare unlike things in an interesting and surprising way.
Figurative Language. Words that create images using language that has deeper meaning than what the actual words express. There are several types of figurative.
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE. The repetition of vowel sounds but not consonants. Examples: The cat sat on a mat. ASSONANCE.
Unit 4 Notes The theme of a literary work is its central idea, insight, or message. – This central idea is often expressed as a generalization about life.
What are the SIX types? Simile Metaphor Personificati on Hyperbol e Allitera- tion Idiom.
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE. Figurative Language  Figurative language is any language that is not used in a literal (meaning exactly what is says) way.  It’s.
Types of Figurative Language Simile Metaphor Alliteration Personification Onomatopoeia Hyperbole Idioms.
Go Figure! Figurative Language Grades 6-8 Recognizing Figurative Language The opposite of literal language is figurative language. Figurative language.
Figurative Language Mrs. GatzEnglish 9. Figurative language is a great way to make your writing more descriptive.
Similarly, many ordinary jobs may look dull, but they are as essential as water to our society. He loved camping, and his job was like a holiday to him.
Journal #3 Figurative & Literal Language. Literal language Language that means exactly what it says. For Example: This yellow slide is about literal language.
Figurative Language. Authors use figurative language to enrich their poetry. They use it to compare unlike things in an interesting and surprising way.
PoetryPoetry Vocabulary. 1.Alliteration: –Repetition of initial consonant sounds 2.Allusion: –A reference to a well-known person, place, event, literary.
WELCOME TO THIS IRSC ADULT EDUCATION ELLUMINATE SESSION Diana Lenartiene, Ed. S. moderator/instructor.
Figures of Speech POETRY:. Figures of Speech A figure of speech is always based on a comparison, and it is NOT literally true. “I’m going to give you.
Figurative Language (a.k.a. Figures of Speech). Literal Language You have probably read or heard someone make a comment similar to this one: The store.
Go Figure! Notes on figurative language Recognizing Figurative Language The opposite of literal language is figurative language. Figurative language.
Go Figure! Figurative Language Recognizing Figurative Language The opposite of literal language is figurative language. Figurative language is language.
Reviewing Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Hyperbole, and Alliteration Learning to Identify and Interpret Each Understanding Figurative Language “Figures.
Poetry, Figurative Language, and Sound Devices
Agenda (for me) Voice Lesson: Fig. Lang. #1 Vocab Quiz Unit 8
HW: Work on Research Paper – gathering more evidence
Agenda Voice Lesson: Julius Caesar (questions from last unit test)/Fig. Lang. #1 ATSS, D.L. Group #1 – chaps. 4-9 ATSS, Quiz, Chaps. 1-9 and Background.
Agenda (for me) Voice Lesson: Figurative Language #1
Poetry Notes #2 Figurative Language.
Honors Paideia Agenda A 9/28/2015
Figurative Language.
My Figurative Language Project
Honors Paideia Agenda B 9/21/2015
THE POWERFUL WORLD OF FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE.
Figurative Language.
Simile, Metaphor, Personification
Presentation transcript:

Metaphors Similes Personification Figurative Language Metaphors Similes Personification

Metaphors, Similes, & Personification Belong to a class of language called figurative language Figurative language: Is any language NOT used in a literal way Is a way of saying one thing, but meaning another Doesn’t make sense if taken literally

Examples of Figurative Language “The catcher at the baseball game was the bomb!” Figurative meaning: the catcher is skilled, practiced, and maybe cute? “That ball sat in the outfield.” Figurative meaning: no one was quick enough to get the ball. “Jimmy ran like a cheetah to first base.” Figurative meaning: Jimmy is a fast runner-the fastest-like a cheetah.

Metaphors, Similes, Personification Figurative Language -Saying one thing, but meaning another (Not literal) Literal Language -Means exactly what it says

Why use Figurative Language? It is a rich, strong, and vivid way to express meaning By using it, we are able to say more in fewer words For example: The poet Robert Burns says, “My love is like a red, red rose.” He is saying many things: His love is beautiful, soft and fragrant. The rose is red - the color of passion. This adds another layer of meaning A rose has thorns, which says that there is a potential danger in loving her (She may hurt him) Thus, by comparing his love to a red rose, the poet is able to squeeze many ideas into a single line

Metaphors and Similes Metaphors and similes are used to compare things that are not usually seen as similar Metaphors imply the comparison Similes state the comparison directly

Examples Suppose that you have just taken an extremely hard test… To turn this into a metaphor you could say, “That test was a bear!” You are not saying that the test was a literal bear, but that it was unpredictable and hard to deal with. The comparison between the test and the bear is not directly stated - it is implied or suggested This is what a metaphor does-it implies a comparison in a fresh, interesting way

Metaphors and Similes Continued Now let’s take the same idea and turn it into a simile To make the test into a simile, you make the comparison direct For example: “Taking that test was like struggling with a bear!” It is still non-literal language Taking the test is not exactly like struggling with a bear, but with a simile you must come right out and state the comparison Signal words give you a hint that similes are coming…hint/signal words include: as, like, than, similar to, and resembles. Be careful, though! These words don’t always indicate similes For example: The sentence “I look like my sister,” does not contain a simile-it is a literal statement In using similes or metaphors, two unlike things must be compared

Metaphors and Similes Continued Metaphors and similes have literal terms and figurative terms The literal term is what we are comparing to something else. It’s what is real; it means what it is. For example, the literal term in the metaphor, “That test was a bear!” is test; we are really talking about a test. The figurative term is what is being compared to the literal term. The figurative terms means something other than itself, something non-literal. The figurative term in the metaphor is bear The test is not a bear, but it has some bear-like qualities that can help us understand how hard the test was.

Practice I got a flood of mail yesterday. Mail Flood Figure of speech Metaphor or simile? Literal term Figurative term I got a flood of mail yesterday. Mail Flood Alice sang like a crow. Jeff was taller than the Empire State Building. The shoes cost a king’s ransom.

Personification Special kind of metaphor that gives human-like qualities to something that is not human (such as an animal, an object, or an idea) For example: “The tree sighed sadly in the cold.” A tree can’t really sigh or be sad-it is an inhuman object that is being given human-like qualities