7p figurative language 2009

18
Figurative Language Parts of Speech make up our language. Figures of Speech bring it to life!

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Page 1: 7P Figurative Language 2009

Figurative Language

Parts of Speech make up our language.

Figures of Speech bring it to life!

Page 2: 7P Figurative Language 2009

Simile a comparison of two unlike things using as, like, or than

• The stars twinkled like fireflies in the night.• Her heart is as big as Texas.

Page 3: 7P Figurative Language 2009

“A Book” by Emily Dickinson

“There is no frigate like a bookTo take us lands away,Nor any coursers like a pageOf prancing poetry…”

Page 4: 7P Figurative Language 2009

“Me” by Walter de la Mare

“As long as I liveI shall always beMyself--and no other,Just me.Like a tree.Like a willow or elder,An aspen, a thorn,Or a cypress forlorn…”

Page 5: 7P Figurative Language 2009

Metaphor a comparison of two unlike things without using as, like, or than

• My mother is a bear in the mornings.• Her snow white hair was covered with a

hat.• My mind is in left field today.

Page 6: 7P Figurative Language 2009

“Fireflies” by Carolyn Hall

“Little lamps of the dusk,You fly low and gold.When the summer eveningStarts to unfold…”

“..But when the night has flowered..”

Page 7: 7P Figurative Language 2009

Personificationgiving human qualities to non-humans

• The moon was winking through the clouds.• The leaves danced in the breeze.

Page 8: 7P Figurative Language 2009

“Autumn” by Emily Dickinson

“The maple wears a brighter scarf,The field a scarlet gown.Lest I should be old-fashioned,I’ll put a trinket on.”

Page 9: 7P Figurative Language 2009

Alliterationrepetition of the same initial consonant sound in two or more words of a sentence

• The tiny tot teethed on the toy.• The big bad bully belched.• The frog jumped free from the frazzled net.

Page 10: 7P Figurative Language 2009

“This is My Rock” by David McCord

“This is my rockAnd here I runTo steal the secret of the sun…”

Page 11: 7P Figurative Language 2009

Apostrophespeaking to an absent or inanimate object

• Bell, don’t ring now!• Come on, car. Don’t run out of gas!

Page 12: 7P Figurative Language 2009

“Little Lamb” by William Blake

“Little lamb, who made thee?Dost thou know who made thee?Gave thee life, and bade thee feedBy the stream and o’er the mead…”

Page 13: 7P Figurative Language 2009

Onomatopoeiawords that imitate a sound

• The buzzing clock woke me.• Her swooshing skirt was annoying.

Page 14: 7P Figurative Language 2009

“The Bells” by Edgar Allan Poe

“Hear the sledges with the bells--Silver bells!

…From the jingling and the tinkling of the bells.”

Page 15: 7P Figurative Language 2009

Hyperboleobvious and deliberate exaggeration

•I am so hungry that I could die.

•I told you a million times to head your paper.

Page 16: 7P Figurative Language 2009

PUNa play on the multiple meanings of words or on two words that sound alike but have different meanings.

•An elevator makes ghosts happy because it lifts the spirits.

•To write with a broken pencil is pointless.

•Seven days without laughter makes one weak.

Page 17: 7P Figurative Language 2009

AnachronismSomething misplaced in time

• Abe Lincoln was watching a movie the night he was shot.

• Ben Franklin came home and realized his microwave was blinking.

Page 18: 7P Figurative Language 2009

AnthropomorphismGiving a god human characteristics

“He’s got the whole world in His hands.”

And God said, “Let there be light.”