figurative language academic vocabulary, defined and examples
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This presentation includes the 8 most-used figurative language academic vocabulary terms along with east to understand definitions and examples. It is ready to use in the classroom today!TRANSCRIPT
Figurative LanguageAcademic Vocabulary
For Middle School
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WHAT IS FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE?
Figurative language is a word or phrase that departs from everyday literal language for the sake of comparison, emphasis, clarity, or freshness
WHY USE FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE?
Used well, figurative language enhances your writing and can be an economical way of getting an image or a point across. However, used incorrectly, figurative language can be confusing or downright silly.
1. Hyperbole
• Extreme Exaggeration used to make a point:
– “If I have told you once, I have told you thousand times…”
– “My dog is so smart he can leap into a burning building and save a baby.”
2. Alliteration
• Reuse of beginning sounds not letters:
– “The king can’t rule with a carrot; he must use his crown.
– “Mary made muffins with her maid.”– “The pretty pony paraded through the
posy patch.”
3. Personification
• Giving human characteristics to non-human things:
– “The dog told me I needed to pay closer attention.”
– “The boulder smiled at me as it glistened in the sun.”
– “The sea was calling me to come and join it.”
4. Onomatopoeia
• Words that make their own sounds.
– “Crash went the waves on the shore.”– “Bang, bang went the gun.”– “Roof, roof went the dog.”
5. Simile
• A comparison using the words “like” or “as”:
– “She was as pretty as a peacock.”– “He talked like a dog barking out
orders.”– “The kitten looked like a skunk with the
strip down his back.”
6. Metaphor
• A comparison WITHOUT using the words “like” or “as”:
– “Talk about bad moods, my dad was a bear this morning.”
– “The king is a majestic elk.”– “Music is the doctor for what ails our
soul.”
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7. Idiom
• Old sayings an cliché’s that have been way-over used but that people recognize their meanings. Their words have different meanings from the dictionary:– “It is raining cats and dogs.”– “They are a dime a dozen.”– “Two heads are better than one.”– “Blood is thicker than water.”black
8. Imagery
• Most figurative language is ALL considered “imagery.” It is when you “Paint a Picture with Words.” Or, the formation of mental images through words:– “Her beauty was like a dream.”– “The succulent, bubbly pizza ignited my
senses as I waited for a tasty bit.”
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Sources
Wiehardt, Ginny. "Figurative Language (definition)." About.com Fiction Writing. About.com, n.d. Web. 17 Feb. 2014.
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