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Alliteration

Definition- A literary device where words are used in quick succession and begin with letters belonging to the same sound group . Example: Furious Flamm is faster than the fox. Alliteration. Alliteration.

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Alliteration

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  1. Definition- A literary device where words are used in quick succession and begin with letters belonging to the same sound group. • Example: Furious Flamm is faster than the fox Alliteration

  2. Alliteration • Alliteration is a literary device where words are used in quick succession and begin with letters belonging to the same sound group • The Wicked Witch of the West went her own way.

  3. Anagram • Anagrams are an extremely popular form of literary device wherein the writer jumbles up parts of the word to create a new word. Example: Making “astronomer” into “moon starer” .

  4. Anagram • Definition : From the syllables of a phrase to the individual letters of a word, any fraction can be jumbled to create a new form. • Mother-in-law - Woman Hitler

  5. Analogy • Definition: An analogy is a literary device that helps to establish a relationship based on similarities between two concepts or ideas • Example: What ground is to a penguin, sky is to an eagle.

  6. Analogy • An analogy is a literary device that helps to establish a relationship based on similarities between two concepts or ideas. • If guns don’t kill people, other people do, then toasters don’t toast toast, toast toasts toast.

  7. Analogy • Definition : A literary device that helps to establish a relationship based on similarities between two concepts or ideas. • In the same way as one cannot have the rainbow without the rain, one cannot achieve success and riches without hard work.

  8. Archetype • Definition: An archetype is a reference to a concept, a person or an object that has served as a prototype of its kind and is the original idea that has come to be used over and over again • Example: Romeo and Juliet are an archetype of eternal love and a star-crossed love story.

  9. Archetype • Definition: A person or an object that has served as a prototype of its kind and is the original idea that has come to be used over and over again • Example: He is the archetype of a successful businessman

  10. Assonance: Definition: The repetition of the sound of a vowel or diphthong in nonrhyming stressed syllables Example: Hear the mellow wedding bells ring.

  11. Assonance • Assonance refers to repetition of sounds produced by vowels within a sentence or phrase. Example: “True, I do like Sue.”

  12. Circumlocution • Definition: Circumlocution is a form of writing where the writer uses exaggeratedly long and complex sentences in order to convey a meaning that could have otherwise been conveyed through a shorter, much simpler sentence. • Example: Instead of writing “Anne arrived for brunch at 12 pm” the author writes, “12 pm was when Anne reached the brunch party”.

  13. Circumlocution • Circumlocution is a form of writing where the writer uses exaggeratedly long and complex sentences in order to convey a meaning that could have otherwise been conveyed through a shorter, much simpler sentence My Example An electronical cupboard with a series of drawers to put your food in to make it cold (refrigerator)

  14. Connotation • The suggestions and associations which surround a word as opposed to its bare, literal meaning. • A snake always stabs you in the back.

  15. Denotation • Denotation refers to expressing a meaning or the significance of a part of a story in a straightforward, clear-cut manner. • A snake is a reptile with no legs that slithers on the floor.

  16. Epithet • An epithet is a literary device that is used as a descriptive device My Example The King Of Pop

  17. Euphemism D: Comparatively milder or less abrasive form of a negative description instead of its original, unsympathetic form. EX: My grandmother passed away.

  18. Euphemism • Definition: The purpose of euphemisms is to substitute unpleasant and severe words with more genteel ones in order to mask the harshness. • Example: Using “to put out to pasture” when one implies retiring a person because they are too old to be effective.

  19. imagery • the formation of mental images, figures, or likenesses of things, or of such images collectively . • "At the next table a woman stuck her nose in a novel; a college kid pecked at a laptop.

  20. Imagery • One of the strongest devices is imagery wherein the author uses words and phrases to create “mental images” for the reader Example: The gushing brook stole its way down the lush green mountains, dotted with tiny flowers in a riot of colors and trees coming alive with gaily chirping birds

  21. Definition: Is a figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to a person, idea, or object to which it is not literally applicable. • Example: Broken heart - Your heart is not literally broken into pieces; you just feel hurt and sad. Metaphor

  22. Metaphor • Definition- Comparing two things without using the words like or as • Own Example- Comparing two things without using the words like or as

  23. Metaphor • Definition: A figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to a person, idea, or object to which it is not literally applicable. • Example: Take my tears, which are love’s wine.

  24. Onomatopoeia: Definition: The formation of a word from a sound associated with what is named Example: buzz, bang, crackle, splash, boom, etc.

  25. Def: Words whose very sound is very close to the sound they are meant to depict. In other words, it refers to sound words whose pronunciation to the actual sound/noise they represent. • Ex: Grunt, huff, buzz and snap are words whose. Onomatopoeia

  26. Definition: It refers to the practice of attaching human traits and characteristics with inanimate objects, phenomena and animals. • Example: The stars danced playfully in the moonlit sky. Personification

  27. Personification • Definition: One of the most commonly used and recognized literary devices • Example: The sun kissed the flowers

  28. Rhyme Scheme • The rhyme scheme is the practice of rhyming words placed at the end of the lines in the prose/ poetry. My Example Roses are red, violets are blue.( A ) You look like a monkey (B) and you smell like one, too ( A )

  29. Rhyme Scheme • The practice of rhyming words placed at the end of the lines in the prose/ poetry. • Let me not in the marriage of true minds - a admit impediments love is not love – b when it alters when it alteration finds - a or bends with the remover to remove - b

  30. Simile • a figure of speech in which two things, essentially different but thought to be alike in one or more respects, are compared using “like,” “as,” “as if,” or “such” for the purpose of explanation, allusion, or ornament. • March comes in like a lamb and goes out like a lion.

  31. Definition: Refers to a single, related chunk of lines in poetry. It basically refers to one unit or group of lines, which forms one particular faction in poetry • Example: -candy is sweetcandy is neatcandy is wonderfula great tasty treat! Stanza

  32. Stanza • Definition: a single, related chunk of lines in poetry • Example: Little Lamb who made thee Dost thou know who made thee Gave thee life & bid thee feed. By the stream & o'er the mead

  33. SYNTAX • The arrangement of words and phrases to create well-formed sentences in a language • Ex : The young man carries the lady. vs. The lady carries the young man

  34. Syntax: Definition: The arrangement of words and phrases to create well-formed sentences in a language Example: To your house we are going. & We are going to your house.

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