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Figurative Language idioms simile hyperbole personification metaphor
Alliteration onomatopoeia
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Figurative Language The opposite of literal language is figurative language. Figurative language is language that means more than what it says on the surface. It usually gives the reader a lot of description. It helps the reader get a vivid mental image. It puts a picture in the readers mind
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Huh? The reader has to think in order to understand the meaning
So what’s your job? INTERPRET what the author is tr saying!
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Types of Figurative Language (on your test and projects)
Personification Simile Metaphor Alliteration Hyperbole Onomatopoeia Idioms
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Personification Giving human traits to non-human characters
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The flowers danced in the wind.
The friendly gates welcomed us. The hurricane’s winds are yelling while blowing outside my window.
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Comparing two unlike things using the words “like” “than” or “as”
Simile Comparing two unlike things using the words “like” “than” or “as”
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I am hungry as a horse. You run like a rabbit. She is happy as a clam.
She is happy as a clam. He is sneakier than a snake.
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Metaphor: Comparing two unlike things without using “like” “than” or “as”
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The road was a ribbon wrapped through the desert.
The clown was a feather floating away.
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beginning consonant sound
Alliteration: repetition of the beginning consonant sound of several words in a phrase
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Alliteration (continued)
Alliteration: when the first sound in words repeat. Example Peter Piper picked a pickled pepper. We lurk late. We shoot straight.
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Stan the strong surfer saved several swimmers on Saturday.
Tiny Tommy Thomson takes toy trucks to Timmy’s on Tuesday.
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Hyperbole EEE—extreme exaggeration for effect
It is used to emphasize a point. Example: Ms. Hobbs talked to us about our projects a million times.
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the objects they name or the sound those objects make
Onomatopoeia: Words that sound like the objects they name or the sound those objects make
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Onomatopoeia Onomatopoeia: When a word’s pronunciation imitates its sound. Examples Buzz Fizz Woof Hiss Clink Boom Beep Vroom Zip
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The firecracker made a loud ka-boom!
The ball went swish as it hit the net. I knew the car was going to break down because it went chug chug chug…
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Idioms An idiom refers to a phrase that cannot be understood by knowing what the individual words in the phrase mean. Example: "She has a bee in her bonnet," meaning "she is obsessed," cannot be literally translated into another language word for word.
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Idioms (continued) An expression that carries a different meaning because of the context in which it is used “slang” terms Examples “Up the creek without a paddle” “On top of the world” “Fingers crossed” “Shake a leg” or “Break a leg” “Put a lid on it” “It’s raining cats and dogs”
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