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Figurative Language: Part 2 What do you already know about figurative language? Why do you think learning figurative language might be important?

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Presentation on theme: "Figurative Language: Part 2 What do you already know about figurative language? Why do you think learning figurative language might be important?"— Presentation transcript:

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2 Figurative Language: Part 2 What do you already know about figurative language? Why do you think learning figurative language might be important?

3 Terms You Know: Simile Metaphor Personification

4 Terms You Will Know: Onomatopoeia Alliteration Hyperbole Symbolism Imagery

5 Onomatopoeia An onomatopoeia is a word that represents a sound. In other words, it’s a sound in word form.

6 Onomatopoeia Examples Example #1: The firecracker made a loud “ka-boom!” Example #2: I heard a “swoosh” at the basketball game.

7 moo Onomatopoeia ring crunch splat

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10 Listen for the Onomatopoeia Mrs. Munger's Class

11 Activity 1: Brainstorm With the person sitting next to you, write a bunch of onomatopoeias. You can use nouns and verbs—like “buzz” and “click” or “buzzed” and “clicked.” This is a competition! When you get to 20 onomatopoeia, raise your hands!

12 Activity 2: Descriptive Sentences By yourself, write 3 descriptive sentences. Each one must use a different onomatopoeia. Each person will get to share his/her best one!

13 Closing Onomatopoeia What is an onomatopoeia? Why might you use an onomatopoeia in your writing?

14 Alliteration Alliteration is the repeating of consonant sounds (not vowels) at the beginning of words. What are consonants?

15 Alliteration Examples Example #1: Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers. Example #2: It was a slippery snake.

16 What about vowels? “Alice ate an apple” is not alliteration. It is called something else that we will learn during our poetry unit. The term “alliteration” only works for words that start with consonants—not vowels.

17 What the purpose? The purpose of alliteration is to create a consistent pattern that catches the mind's eye and focuses attention. The wild waves wished for winter.

18 In Stories and Poetry… Fresh Fish Do you like fresh fish? It's just fine at Finney's Diner. Finney also has some fresher fish that's fresher and much finer. But his best fish is his freshest fish and Finney says with pride, "The finest fish at Finney's is my freshest fish, French-fried!" "Oh say can you say" Dr. Seuss, 1979

19 Sports Love Alliteration

20 Ads on the Internet

21 Products

22 Store Names

23 Is it alliteration? The cow counted sheep in order to fall asleep.

24 Is it alliteration? I see the sun shine through my window.

25 Is it alliteration? He quickly clicked the keyboard.

26 Is it alliteration? Either elephant might eat eels.

27 Activity 1: Read the letter and highlight examples of similes, metaphors, and alliteration. If you need to change the color key, do it! 23 Similes 7 Metaphors 7+ Alliteration

28 Activity 2: Tongue Twisters Make 5 twisters of your own. Each one must be a complete sentence with at least 5 words.

29 Compare and Contrast AlliterationRhyming

30 Closing Alliteration What is alliteration? How does it make reading more interesting? Why might you want to use it in your writing?


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