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Figurative Language “Figuring it Out”.

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Presentation on theme: "Figurative Language “Figuring it Out”."— Presentation transcript:

1 Figurative Language “Figuring it Out”

2 Figurative and Literal Language
Literally: words function exactly as defined The car is blue. He caught the football. Figuratively: figure out what it means I’ve got your back. You’re a doll. ^Figures of Speech

3 Comparison of two things using “like” or “as.”
Simile Comparison of two things using “like” or “as.” Examples The metal twisted like a ribbon. She is as sweet as candy.

4 A comparison must be made.
Important! Using “like” or “as” doesn’t make a simile. A comparison must be made. Not a Simile: I like pizza. Simile: The moon is like a pizza.

5 Metaphor Two things are compared without using “like” or “as.”
Examples All the world is a stage. Men are dogs. Her heart is stone.

6 Personification Giving human traits to objects or ideas. Examples
The sunlight danced. Water on the lake shivers. The streets are calling me.

7 Exaggerating to show strong feeling or effect.
Hyperbole Exaggerating to show strong feeling or effect. Examples I will love you forever. My house is a million miles away. She’d kill me.

8 Onomatopoeia A word that creates a sound effect SPLAT PING SLAM POP
POW

9 Idiom A saying that isn’t meant to be taken literally.
Doesn’t mean what it says Examples: Don’t be a stick in the mud! You’re the apple of my eye. I have an ace up my sleeve.

10 Pun A form of “word play” in which words have a double meaning. Examples: I wondered why the baseball was getting bigger and then it hit me. I’m reading a book about anti-gravity. It’s impossible to put down. I was going to look for my missing watch, but I didn’t have the time.

11 Alliteration the repetition of the same sounds or of the same kinds of sounds at the beginning of words or in stressed syllables Examples: -The babbling brook brought my mind away from my troubles. -Carrie's cat clawed her couch, creating chaos.

12 Irony The use of words to convey the opposite of their literal meaning; a statement or situation where the meaning is contradicted by the appearance or presentation of the idea

13 Irony Examples: -A man who is a traffic cop gets his license suspended for unpaid parking tickets. -The Titanic was promoted as being 100% unsinkable; but, in 1912 the ship sank on its maiden voyage. -In Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Romeo finds Juliet in a drugged state and he thinks she is dead. He kills himself. When Juliet wakes up she finds Romeo dead and kills herself.

14 Irony


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