Figurative language: Difference between revisions

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The Redcoats are coming!
The Redcoats are coming!
=Figurative Language Games=
It's always great to learn figurative language when you can play games.
Figurative Language Jeopardy
StarrMatica
Spell City
Super Shooter Basketball Review Game
Soft Schools-Figurative Language Quiz


=Why do we use figurative language?=
=Why do we use figurative language?=

Revision as of 13:58, 5 November 2014

Figurative language involves comparing two things that may not relate to each other. This type of language the varies from the norms of literal language, in which words mean exactly what they say. Figurative language doesn't literally mean what it says. Figurative language means using words to signfy another meaning or to recall an emotion.

Figurative Language Words

Metaphor

A figure of speech that makes a direct comparison between a thing or person to another.

Example: You were a gray beret and the whole being at peace.

Personification

A figure of speech that provides nature or human-like qualities to something non-human.

Example: The restless tidal waves raged all throughout the night.

Alliteration

A figure of speech that signifies an occurrence of closely connected words all starting with the same letter.

Example: A big bully beats a baby boy.

Simile

A figure of speech in which two completely different things are explicitly compared to one another using the words, “like” or “as”.

Example: He was black as night and as fast as light.

Hyperbole

An obvious and intentional exaggeration, an extravagant statement or figure of speech not intended to be taken literally, as “to wait an eternity.” Language that describes something as better or worse than it really is.

example: "enough to feed a small army"

Imagery

Pictures or photographs, language that causes people to imagine pictures in their mind, pictures of people or things in a work of art

examples: the book contains a great deal of sexual imagery, the movie was full of biblical imagery

Onomatopoeia

The creation of words that imitate natural sounds. The use of words whose sound suggests the sense. The naming of a thing or action by a vocal imitation of the sound associated with it.

examples: buzz, hiss, hiccup


Ding Dong

Idiom

An expression that cannot be understood from the meanings of its separate words but that has a separate meaning of its own, a form of language that is spoken in a particular area and that uses some of its own words, grammar, and pronunciations, a style or form of expression that is characteristic of a particular person, type of art, etc., an expression in the usage of a language that is peculiar to itself either grammatically (as no, it wasn't me) or in having a meaning that cannot be derived from the conjoined meanings of its elements (as ride herd on for “supervise”).

example: "give way" meaning "retreat"

Symbol

An action, object, event, etc., that expresses or represents a particular idea or quality, a letter, group of letters, character, or picture that is used instead of a word or group of words, something that stands for or suggests something else by reason of relationship, association, convention, or accidental resemblance; especially : a visible sign of something invisible (, the lion is a symbol of courage), an arbitrary or conventional sign used in writing or printing relating to a particular field to represent operations, quantities, elements, relations, or qualities, an object or act representing something in the unconscious mind that has been repressed (,phallic symbols), an act, sound, or object having cultural significance and the capacity to excite or objectify a response

example: the traditional physician's symbol of a staff entwined with a snake


Pun

A play on words in which humorous effect is produced by using a word that suggests two or more meanings or by exploiting similar sounding words having different meanings.

An elephant's opinion carries a lot of weight.

Allusion

A figure of speech that makes a reference to person, place, or something that happened.

Stop acting like my ex-husband please.

Paradox

Someone who does two things that seem to be opposite to each other or who has the qualities that are opposite.

The swiftest traveler is he that goes afoot.

Examples of Figurative Language

Her voice sounds like Ashanti.

It's raining cats and dogs.

The sky is falling.

The poorest man is the richest, and the rich are poor.

I move fast like a cheetah on the Serengeti.

Her head was spinning from all the new information.

I'm so hungry I could eat a hippopotamus.

I’ve told you a million times to sweep the floor!

Alright, the sky misses the sun at night.

Hear the mellow wedding bells.-Edgar Allen Poe

Out of reach, I pull out with a screech.

The toast jumped out of the toaster.

The sea lashed out in anger at the ships, unwilling to tolerate another battle.

The Redcoats are coming!

Why do we use figurative language?

Authors use figurative language because they want to convey creativity. Figurative language attracts you into the story. You can use it as a rhetorical tool by lengthening and emphasizing the words to get the most out of the meaning. In creative writing, figurative language is used more practically. However, figurative language makes things harder or easier to comprehend confiding on the intention of detail.

External Links

Figurative Language

Examples of Figurative Language

Different figurative language words and definitions

Figurative Language and Rhetorical Devices

What is figurative language?

Why do writers use figurative language?

Work Cited

Corp., LoveToKnow. Your Dictionary The Dictionary We Can Understand. LovetoKnow Corp. 1996-2014.

Nelsoncj. Figurative Language Definitions/Examples/Pictures. Quizlet LLC. 2014.

Schowartz, B. Debora, Dr. Figurative Language and Rhetorical Devices. California Polytechnic State University. 2002.

Martin, Phillip. What is figurative language? All Rights Reserved.

Answer Corporation. Why do writers use figurative language? Answer Corporation. 2014.