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Page 1: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure
Page 2: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Figures of Speech

Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort

of special effect or impression.

A “figure of speech” is an intentional deviation from the ordinary usage of

language.

Page 3: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Types of Figurative Language

• Simile• Metaphor• Personification• Alliteration• Onomatopoeia

Page 4: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

ImageryWhat are your five senses? Sight, Hearing,

Touch, Taste, and Smell

• An image conveys a sense perception , i.e., a visual picture, a sound, a feeling of touch, a taste, or an odor

• Imagery = a noun used to refer to a set of related images in poem or the totality of images in a poem:

Page 5: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure
Page 6: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Simile

• He ran down the field like a freight train.

Page 7: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Simile• A simile is a figure of speech in which an explicit

comparison is made using the comparative words like, as, resembles, than. Similes are easy to spot.

(X is like Y: X is compared to Y in order to illustrate X more fancifully, poetically, or effectively. But Y is not a literal representation of X, not actual.)

• The team’s center looked like a skyscraper.• My love is like a red, red rose.• We were as quiet as frightened mice.

Page 8: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Simile

• Life is like a box of chocolates; you never know what you’re going to get.

Page 9: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Simile

• She was as quiet as a mouse.

Page 10: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure
Page 11: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Metaphor• The process of

describing one thing as if it were another.

• Does not use “like”

or “as”

Page 12: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Metaphor• A metaphor also compares, but a metaphor is a bit

more sophisticated than a simile.

• For one thing, in a metaphor, the words

like or as are missing. So readers have to recognize the comparison on their own without those easy words which help us to spot a simile so quickly.

Page 13: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Metaphor (continued)

In a metaphor, a writer writes that X is Y. Readers understand that we are not to take the comparison literally, but that the metaphor helps us to see X in a new way.

My brother is a prince.

Gillette Stadium was a slaughterhouse.

Page 14: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Personification Another kind of comparison is called

personification. Here, animals, elements of nature, and abstract ideas are given human qualities.

John Milton calls time “the subtle thief of youth” (599). Homer refers to “the rosy fingers of dawn” (599).

Other examples of personification

– The stars smiled down on us.

– An angry wind slashed its way across the island.

Page 15: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Personification•A figure of speech in which a thing, quality, or idea is represented as a person.

Page 16: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Personification

• One lonely slice of pizza remained.

Page 17: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

                                                            

The flowers danced in the wind.

The Earth coughed and choked in all of the pollution.

The friendly gates welcomed us.

Page 18: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Personification

• The sun peeked over the mountain tops.

Page 19: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Personification

• After a long day of work, the swimming pool was calling my name.

Page 20: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Oxymoron• Oxymoron - two contradictory terms are placed side by side, usually for an effect of

intensity:• darkness visible (John Milton)• burning ice

People often enjoy joking sarcastically by declaring certain pairs of words to be oxymorons:

military intelligence

Page 21: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Apostrophe

• A person or thing which is absent is addressed:

“What thoughts I have of you tonight, Walt Whitman” (Ginsberg 599).

“Oh sun, I miss you, now that it’s December.”

Page 22: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Alliteration

• The repetition of the same sound at the beginning of two or more closely associated words.

Page 23: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Alliteration

• Like loads of laundry lying on the lovely linoleum.

Page 24: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Alliteration

• Sally sells seashells by the seashore.

Page 25: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Alliteration

• Those creepy crawly critters caused a cramp in my cranium.

Page 26: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Want more?• Figures of speech are numerous. The effective practice of

communication is called rhetoric, and many, many figures of speech can be identified in language use.

• Some other figures are anachronism, euphemism, pun, and onomatopoeia (o no mat o pee ya). In this last figure, words are used to convey sound, like

Oh no, you say? Here it comes!

bzzzz or cock-a-doodle-doo.

Page 27: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Onomatopoeia

• A word that imitates the sound it represents.

Page 28: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Onomatopoeia

• The water gurgled as it flowed down the drain.

Page 29: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Onomatopoeia

• The storm clouds rumbled across the sky.

Page 30: Figures of Speech Figurative language uses figures of speech to convey unique images and create some sort of special effect or impression. A “figure

Birkerts, Sven. Literature: The Evolving Canon. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1993.

Ginsberg, Allen. “A Supermarket in California.” Literature:

The Evolving Canon. Sven P. Birkerts, ed. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1993. 599.

Kennedy, X.J. and Dana Gioia, eds. Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama. 7th ed. New York: Longman, 1999.

Works Cited