Figurative Language Figuring it Out Figurative and Literal

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Figurative Language “Figuring it Out”

Figurative Language “Figuring it Out”

Figurative and Literal Language Literally: words function exactly as defined The car is blue.

Figurative and Literal Language Literally: words function exactly as defined The car is blue. He caught the football. Figuratively: figure out what it means I’ve got your back. You’re a doll. ^Figures of Speech

Watch and Learn • https: //www. youtube. com/watch? v=r. W 4 Dt ZGxjq 0

Watch and Learn • https: //www. youtube. com/watch? v=r. W 4 Dt ZGxjq 0

Simile Comparison of two things using “like” or “as. ” Examples The metal twisted

Simile Comparison of two things using “like” or “as. ” Examples The metal twisted like a ribbon. She is as sweet as candy. I’m sick as a dog.

Important! Using “like” or “as” doesn’t make a simile. A comparison must be made.

Important! Using “like” or “as” doesn’t make a simile. A comparison must be made. Not a Simile: I like pizza. Simile: The moon is like a pizza.

Metaphor Two things are compared without using “like” or “as. ” Examples All the

Metaphor Two things are compared without using “like” or “as. ” Examples All the world is a stage. Her heart is stone. You are a couch potato

Personification Giving human traits to objects or ideas. Examples The sunlight danced. Water on

Personification Giving human traits to objects or ideas. Examples The sunlight danced. Water on the lake shivers. The streets are calling me.

Hyperbole Exaggerating to show strong feeling or effect. Examples I will love you forever.

Hyperbole Exaggerating to show strong feeling or effect. Examples I will love you forever. My house is a million miles away. She’d kill me.

Understatement Expression with less strength than expected. The opposite of hyperbole. I’ll be there

Understatement Expression with less strength than expected. The opposite of hyperbole. I’ll be there in one second. This won’t hurt a bit.

Onomatopoeia • • • A word that “makes” a sound SPLAT PING SLAM POP

Onomatopoeia • • • A word that “makes” a sound SPLAT PING SLAM POP POW

Idiom • A saying that isn’t meant to be taken literally. • Doesn’t “mean”

Idiom • A saying that isn’t meant to be taken literally. • Doesn’t “mean” what it says • Don’t be a stick in the mud! • You’re the apple of my eye. • I have an ace up my sleeve.

Oxymoron • When two words are put together that contradict each other. “Opposites” •

Oxymoron • When two words are put together that contradict each other. “Opposites” • Jumbo Shrimp • Pretty Ugly • Freezer Burn • Known Secret • Deafening Silence • Awfully Nice • Confirmed Rumor

Pun • A form of “word play” in which words have a double meaning.

Pun • A form of “word play” in which words have a double meaning. • I wondered why the baseball was getting bigger and then it hit me. • I’m reading a book about antigravity. It’s impossible to put it down. • I was going to look for my missing watch, but I didn’t have the time.

Proverb • A figurative saying in which a bit of “wisdom” is given. •

Proverb • A figurative saying in which a bit of “wisdom” is given. • An apple a day keeps the doctor away • The early bird catches the worm

Quiz On a separate sheet of paper… 1. I will put an example of

Quiz On a separate sheet of paper… 1. I will put an example of figurative language on the board. 2. You will write whether it is an simile, metaphor, personification, hyperbole, pun, proverb, idiom, onomatopoeia, oxymoron or understatement. 3. You can use your notes.

1 He drew a line as straight as an arrow.

1 He drew a line as straight as an arrow.

2 Knowledge is a kingdom and all who learn are kings and queens.

2 Knowledge is a kingdom and all who learn are kings and queens.

3 Can I see you for a second?

3 Can I see you for a second?

4 The sun was beating down on me.

4 The sun was beating down on me.

5 A flag wags like a fishhook there in the sky.

5 A flag wags like a fishhook there in the sky.

6 I'd rather take baths with a man-eating shark, or wrestle a lion alone

6 I'd rather take baths with a man-eating shark, or wrestle a lion alone in the dark, eat spinach and liver, pet ten porcupines, than tackle the homework, my teacher assigns.

7 Ravenous and savage from its long polar journey, the North Wind is searching

7 Ravenous and savage from its long polar journey, the North Wind is searching for food—

8 Dinner is on the house.

8 Dinner is on the house.

9 Can I have one of your chips?

9 Can I have one of your chips?

10 Don’t bite the hand that feeds you.

10 Don’t bite the hand that feeds you.

11. • The clouds smiled down at me.

11. • The clouds smiled down at me.

12. • SPLAT!

12. • SPLAT!

13. • She is as sweet as candy

13. • She is as sweet as candy

14. • I could sleep forever!

14. • I could sleep forever!

15. • He drove his expensive car into a tree and found out how

15. • He drove his expensive car into a tree and found out how the Mercedes bends

16. • I used to have a fear of hurdles, but I got over

16. • I used to have a fear of hurdles, but I got over it

17. • The wheat field was a sea of gold.

17. • The wheat field was a sea of gold.

18. • The streets called to him.

18. • The streets called to him.

19. • POP!

19. • POP!

20. • She was dressed to the nines.

20. • She was dressed to the nines.

21. • The early bird catches the worm.

21. • The early bird catches the worm.

22. • Old news

22. • Old news

23. • Your face is killing me!

23. • Your face is killing me!

24. • She was as white as a ghost.

24. • She was as white as a ghost.

25. • She has a skeleton in her closet.

25. • She has a skeleton in her closet.

Poetic Sound Devices Alliteration The first consonant sound is repeated Ex: I have stood

Poetic Sound Devices Alliteration The first consonant sound is repeated Ex: I have stood still and stopped the sound of feet (Robert Frost)

Poetic Sound Devices Onomatopoeia The word imitates the sound that object makes. Ex: Tick-tock;

Poetic Sound Devices Onomatopoeia The word imitates the sound that object makes. Ex: Tick-tock; click, clack; drip, drop; sizzle

Poetic Sound Devices Consonance Consonants within words are repeated. Ex: All mammals named Sam

Poetic Sound Devices Consonance Consonants within words are repeated. Ex: All mammals named Sam must be clammy.

Poetic Sound Devices Assonance Vowel sounds within words are repeated. Ex: I must confess

Poetic Sound Devices Assonance Vowel sounds within words are repeated. Ex: I must confess that in my quest I felt depressed and restless.

Challenge! Find alliteration, assonance, and consonance in the following poem: Eldorado Gaily bedlight A

Challenge! Find alliteration, assonance, and consonance in the following poem: Eldorado Gaily bedlight A gallant knight In sunshine and in shadow Had journeyed long, Singing a song, In search of Eldorado ~Edgar Allan Poe (excerpt)

Answer Alliteration: Gaily, gallant; sunshine, singing, song, search Assonance: bedlight, knight, sunshine Consonance: sunshine,

Answer Alliteration: Gaily, gallant; sunshine, singing, song, search Assonance: bedlight, knight, sunshine Consonance: sunshine, shadow

Challenge! Find all the examples of onomatopoeia in the following poem. Storm Booming and

Challenge! Find all the examples of onomatopoeia in the following poem. Storm Booming and banging thunder in the air Crashing and rumbling waves against wet rock Booming and scraping, lighting the sky Swishing and sloshing rain on a windscreen Metallic thuds on a tin roof Swishing and swooshing the flooding road Howling and moaning, wind attacking Wavering, crashing, and sizzling Power everywhere Thudding and banging hail on every window Slamming and echoing doors in the house ~Olisha Starr

Answer Storm Booming and banging thunder in the air Crashing and rumbling waves against

Answer Storm Booming and banging thunder in the air Crashing and rumbling waves against wet rock Booming and scraping, lighting the sky Swishing and sloshing rain on a windscreen Metallic thuds on a tin roof Swishing and swooshing the flooding road Howling and moaning, wind attacking Wavering, crashing, and sizzling Power everywhere Thudding and banging hail on every window Slamming and echoing doors in the house ~Olisha Starr

Let’s Play! • Figurative Language in Disney Movies: https: //www. youtube. com/watch? v=Be 2

Let’s Play! • Figurative Language in Disney Movies: https: //www. youtube. com/watch? v=Be 2 BR 8 f. NZ_Q • Figurative Language Game Show: https: //www. youtube. com/watch? v=4 Ue. RBAmev. A • Figurative Language Quiz: https: //www. youtube. com/watch? v=Xk. Cnfs Rn. KWc