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Go Figure!. Figurative Language. Sherwood Brooks Driftwood Middle School. Recognizing Figurative Language. The opposite of literal language is figurative language. Figurative language is language that means more than what it says on the surface.
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Go Figure! Figurative Language Sherwood Brooks Driftwood Middle School
Recognizing Figurative Language The opposite of literal language is figurative language. Figurative language is language that means more than what it says on the surface. • It usually gives us a feeling about its subject. • Poets use figurative language almost as frequently as literal language. When you read poetry, you must be conscious of the difference. Otherwise, a poem may make no sense at all.
Recognizing Literal Language “I’ve eaten so much I feel as if I could literally burst!” • In this case, the person is not using the word literally in its true meaning. Literal means "exact" or "not exaggerated." By pretending that the statement is not exaggerated, the person stresses how much he has eaten. Literal language is language that means exactly what is said. Most of the time, we use literal language.
What is figurative language? • Whenever you describe something by comparing it with something else, you are using figurative language.
Types of Figurative Language • Oxymoron • Pun • Irony • Imagery • Simile • Metaphor • Alliteration • Personification • Onomatopoeia • Hyperbole • Idioms • Euphemisms
simile euphemism Figurative Language personification idiom metaphor hyperbole imagery Alliteration onomatopoeia
Imagery • Language that appeals to the senses. Descriptions of people or objects stated in terms of our senses. • • Sight • • Hearing • • Touch • • Taste • • Smell
Simile • A figure of speech which involves a direct comparison between two unlike things, usually with the words like, as or than. Example: The muscles on his brawny arms are strong as iron bands.
I am as hungry as a horse. You run faster than a rabbit. She is as happy as a clam. He is sneaky like a snake.
Metaphor • A figure of speech which involves an implied comparison between two relatively unlike things using a form of be. The comparison is not announced by like or as. Example: The road was a ribbon wrapped through the desert. The sofa is fertile soil for a couch potato. But my heart is a lonely hunter that hunts on a lonely hill. - William Sharp, The Lonely Hunter
The girl was a fish in the water. The clown was a feather floating away.
Alliteration • Repeated consonant sounds occurring at the beginning of words or within words. Example: She was wide-eyed and wondering while she waited for Walter to waken.
Stan the strong surfer saved several swimmers on Saturday. Don't delay dawns disarming display. Dusk demands daylight. - Paul Mccan Sara's seven sisters slept soundly in sand. Tiny Tommy Thomson takes toy trucks to Timmy’s on Tuesday. She sells sea shell by the sea shore.
Personification • A figure of speech which gives the qualities of a person to an animal, an object, or an idea. Example: “The wind yells while blowing." The wind cannot yell. Only a living thing can yell. The friendly gates welcomed us. The Earth coughed and choked in all of the pollution. The flowers danced in the wind.
Chug chug chug!! Onomatopoeia • The use of words that mimic sounds. Example: The firecracker made a loud ka-boom! Yeeeeee Ahhhhhhhh Swish swish swish
Hyperbole • An exaggerated statement used to heighten effect. It is not used to mislead the reader, but to emphasize a point. Example: She’s said so on several million occasions. I'm so busy trying to accomplish ten million things at once. - I'm trying to accomplish several things at one time. Your dog is so ugly, we had to pay the fleas to live on him. - Here the hyperbole has been used as an insult.
Idioms • An idiom or idiomatic expression is one that cannot be matched or directly translated word-for-word in another language. Example: "She has a bee in her bonnet," meaning "she is obsessed," cannot be literally translated into another language word for word.
Euphemism • Substitution of a mild, inoffensive term for one considered offensive, explicit, or politically correct. • Ethnic cleansing • Enhanced interrogation • Pre-owned • Mentally challenged • Chemical dependency • We have to let you go.Read: You're fired. • You're well fed.Read: You're fat.
Oxymoron • The use of two words that are opposite in meaning • Walking dead • Honest thief • Pretty ugly • Plastic glass • Loners club • A stripper's dressing room • I'd give my right arm to be ambidextrous!
Irony - the contrast between what is expected and what actually is • Verbal irony – the difference between what is said and what is meant • Situational irony – what is happening is the opposite of what is expected • Dramatic irony – the audience or reader knows more than the characters do
Irony • Bill Gates winning a computer. - Situational Irony (He is the owner of the world's largest software company.) • Having a fight with your best friend just before your birthday, and commenting -"Great, this is just what I needed". - Verbal Irony (It is probably the worst thing that could happen before your birthday.) • In Romeo and Juliet, when Juliet is drugged, Romeo assumes her to be dead, and kills himself. Upon waking up Juliet finds him dead, and kills herself. - Dramatic Irony (mainly based on miscommunication and misunderstanding)
A Pun is a play on words • Multiple meaning words • Homophones • Homographs • I bet the butcher the other day that he couldn't reach the meat that was on the top shelf. He refused to take the bet, saying that the steaks were too high. • Santa's helpers are subordinate Clauses • What is a prisoner’s favorite punctuation mark?. • Usually used in jokes and riddles