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Figurative Language. Imagery SimileMetaphor Personification Aural imagery Alliteration Assonance Onomatopoeia Symbol.

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Presentation on theme: "Figurative Language. Imagery SimileMetaphor Personification Aural imagery Alliteration Assonance Onomatopoeia Symbol."— Presentation transcript:

1 Figurative Language

2 Imagery SimileMetaphor Personification Aural imagery Alliteration Assonance Onomatopoeia Symbol

3 Imagery SimileMetaphor Personification Aural imagery Alliteration Assonance Onomatopoeia Symbol

4 Simile – comparison using the words ‘like’ or ‘as’

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6 Similes As black as... As light as a... As clean as a... As quick as a... As hungry as a... As proud as a... As sharp as a... As heavy as... Like a bull in a.. coal feather whistle flash wolf peacock needle lead China shop

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8 Be creative in your choice of comparison

9 Being stood up is like being the last fruit on the tree, Left to wither through the winter Feeling angry is like carrying a volcano in the pit of your stomach that threatens to erupt at any moment The leaves fell from the tree like a thousand paratroopers Leaping into battle behind enemy lines The class was as boring as counting the perforations in a bag of PG tips!

10 Your Turn As black as... As light as a... As clean as a... As hungry as a... As proud as a... As heavy as...

11 A Simile poem By Stanley Cook

12 Like the white curls from a gigantic beard Drifting across the barber’s shop floor In the breeze from the open door; Like the broken parts of the ice floe Afloat on the blue of the ocean, Drifting southward from the Pole; Like a heavily laden treasure fleet In a light wind on the calm sea, Hardly moving with all sails set; Like suds of foam from the waterfall That lathers the rocks at its foot, Gliding over a tranquil pool; Like wool from a fleece, Like smoke from a fire, Like islands in the sky.

13 Your Turn

14 Like the white curls from a gigantic beard Drifting across the barber’s shop floor In the breeze from the open door; Like the broken parts of the ice floe Afloat on the blue of the ocean, Drifting southward from the Pole; Like a heavily laden treasure fleet In a light wind on the calm sea, Hardly moving with all sails set; Like suds of foam from the waterfall That lathers the rocks at its foot, Gliding over a tranquil pool; Like wool from a fleece, Like smoke from a fire, Like islands in the sky.

15 Name the Title - D.H. Lawrence Like a glove, a black glove thrown up at the light, And falling back Wings like bits of umbrella Hanging upside down like rows of disgusting old rags And grinning in their sleep

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17 Swallows with spools of dark thread sewing the shadows together

18 Imagery SimileMetaphor Personification Aural imagery Alliteration Assonance Onomatopoeia Symbol

19 Metaphor – direct comparison without using the words ‘like’ or ‘as’

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21 What season are you?

22 What animal are you ?

23 Musical instrument?

24 Piece of Furniture?

25 Who am I? An owl staring into the darkness, A star fruit, bursting with juice. A dramatic orchestral movement And the sky just after a storm. A swirling black cloak And a whispered secret.

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28 How is a wave like a mountain?

29 Hokusai – ‘The Wave’

30 How is a skater like the earth in its orbit?

31 Ted Hughes With arms swinging, a tremendous skater On the flimsy ice of space, The earth leans into its curve -

32 Norman Nicholson And chiselled clear on stone A spider-web of shell, The thumb print of the sea.

33 May Swenson On silent hinges Open-folds her wings Applauding hands.

34 Phoebe Hesketh Giraffe-tall, gormless somehow, Heads hanging Over the next garden.

35 Gareth Owen Boredom Is Clouds Black as old slate Chucking rain straight On our Housing Estate All grey Day long.

36 Craig Raine There are men On the roof of the church Playing patience, Tile after tile,

37 Your Turn Use a metaphor to describe one of the following as a phrase or line: London Underground An electricity pylon A rhinoceros A hive of bees Fog

38 Lord Alfred Tennyson The Eagle HE clasps the crag with crooked hands; Close to the sun in lonely lands, Ringed with the azure world, he stands. The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls; He watches from his mountain walls, And like a thunderbolt he falls.

39 HE clasps the crag with crooked hands; Close to the sun in lonely lands, Ringed with the azure world, he stands. The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls; He watches from his mountain walls, And like a thunderbolt he falls. metaphor ? simile

40 Imagery SimileMetaphor Personification Aural imagery Alliteration Assonance Onomatopoeia Symbol

41 Personification – giving human qualities to objects & animals

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43 The Sorcerer’s Apprentice

44 The angry clouds marched across the sky. The lonely train whistle cried out in the night. The hungry chainsaw growled loudly. The stubborn dense fog swallowed us. The evening stars winked at me from the sky.

45 Which is the grumpiest?

46 Who is in charge?

47 Which is the wisest?

48 He who owns the whistle, rules the world By Roger McGough January wind and the sun Playing truant again. Rain beginning to scratch Its fingernails across The blackboard sky In the playground Kids divebomb, corner At Silverstone or execute Traitors. Armed With my Acme Thunderer I step outside, Take a deep breath And bring the world To a standstill.

49 The Moon By Percy Shelley AND, like a dying lady lean and pale, Who totters forth, wrapp'd in a gauzy veil, Out of her chamber, led by the insane And feeble wanderings of her fading brain, The moon arose up in the murky east, A white and shapeless mass. Art thou pale for weariness Of climbing heaven and gazing on the earth, Wandering companionless Among the stars that have a different birth, And ever changing, like a joyless eye That finds no object worth its constancy?

50 The story of a 10 pence piece

51 Life according to a mirror

52 Your Turn Use personification to bring one of the following to life: A dentist’s chair An ATM machine An airport metal detector A vending machine A defibrillator

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