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From just Plain Jane, to Wild and Insane!

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Presentation on theme: "From just Plain Jane, to Wild and Insane!"— Presentation transcript:

1 From just Plain Jane, to Wild and Insane!
Adding Descriptive/Figurative Language

2 Key #1: Figurative Language -- Simile
Simile: A simile is a figure of speech that uses like or as to make a direct comparison between two unlike ideas. Everyday speech often contains similes, such as “pale as a ghost,” “good as gold,” “spread like wildfire,” and “clever as a fox.”

3 Key #2: Figurative Language -- Metaphor
Metaphor: A metaphor is a figure of speech in which something is described as though it were something else. A metaphor, like a simile, works by pointing out a similarity between two unlike things. Ex: The snow was a white blanket over the town.

4 Simile v. Metaphor: The Smack Down
“A simile uses like or as to connect things; a metaphor eschews [avoids] both words. Simile: “My love for you is like old lunchmeat. Still here, but way past its expiration date.” Metaphor: “My love for you is a zombie. Dead but still walking around.” The simile creates a little distance; this is like that. Not same, but similar. A metaphor undercuts that distance. This is that. Not just similar, but absolutely (though abstractly) the same” (Wending, 2012).

5 Key #3: Figurative Language -- Personification
Personification: Personification is a type of figurative language in which a nonhuman subject is given human characteristics. Ex: The sky was sad. It cried today.

6 A Word for Every Occasion


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