Figurative-Language-Review1
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Figurative Language
Simile, Metaphor, Hyperbole,
Personification, Alliteration, &
Onomatopoeia
SIMILE
a figure of speech, in which two things are
compared
uses the words “like” or “as”
example: “She is like a rose.”
Built like a tank
Still as a stone
METAPHOR
The comparison of one thing to another
Does NOT use ‘like’ or ‘as’
A stronger comparison- says something
IS something else.
Example: She IS a rose He IS a tank
Examples of a Metaphor
Perry is a pig when he eats.
The teacher was a witch to the children.
He was a volcano, ready to explode with anger.
My mother is a rock during troubled times.
HYPERBOLE
A figure of speech in which exaggeration
is used for emphasis or effect
Example: I could sleep for a year
or This book weighs a ton.
PERSONIFICATION
Giving human qualities to animals or
objects
Example: The daffodils nodded their
yellow heads in the wind
or The snow whispered as it fell to the
ground.
ALLITERATION
Repeating the same first consonant in
speech (must repeat at least two times in
a row)
Example: “Peter Piper picked a peck of
pickled peppers” or
“dewdrops dwell
delicately”
Onomatopoeia
The use of words that imitate the sounds
they describe
Example: “The burning wood crackled
and hissed” or “The bacon sizzled on
the stove”
IDIOMS
An idiom is an expression that means
something other than the literal meanings
of its individual words.
Example: It’s raining cats and dogs.
Literal- Cats and dogs are raining from the
sky.
Figurative- It is raining really hard.
Examples of idioms:
This will be a piece of cake:
A task that can be accomplished very
easily.
I’m stuck between a rock and a hard
place:
Stuck between two very bad options.
Bite Your Tongue!:
Avoid talking.