Alliteration The repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words. Example: Marilyn Monroe...

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Transcript of Alliteration The repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words. Example: Marilyn Monroe...

Alliteration

The repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words.

Example:

Marilyn Monroe was a model and a movie star.

Simile Figure of speech that makes

a comparison between two things that are otherwise not alike, using the words like or as

Example:1. Playing chess with Ashley is like

trying to outsmart a computer. The activity “playing chess with Ashley”

is being compared to “trying to outsmart a computer.” The point is that Ashley can think in a powerful manner that resembles the way a computer operates, not that she is like a computer in any other way.

2. His temper was as explosive as a volcano.

His temper is being compared to a volcano in that it can be sudden and violent.

Metaphor A figure of speech that

makes comparison between two things that are basically unlike but have something in common.

• Similar to simile but does not use like or as

• Figurative language

Sandra Cisneros’s “My Name” Esperanza, the narrator, describes her name.

“It means sadness, it means waiting,” she says.

“It is like the number nine.A muddy color.”

She also says it is like the records that her father plays,

“songs like sobbing.”

Personification

Human qualities are attributed (given) to an object, animal or idea.

Example The gray-eyed morn

smiles on the frowning night.

Pun

A pun is a play on words that sound alike but have different meanings to produce a humorous effect.

Examples:

He bought a donkey because he thought he might get a kick out of it. Romeo: “You have dancing shoes with nimble soles; I have a soul of lead” (Romeo and Juliet)

Foil

A character whose personality and attitude contrast with those of another character

Highlights both character’s traits

Example: an extremely shy character might foil a very talkative one.

Aside Dramatic device in which a

character speaks his or her thoughts aloud, in words meant to be heard by the audience but not by the other characters.

Example: Act 4: Scene 1 Romeo and JulietFriar Laurence [Aside] “I

would I know not why it should be slowed. –

Look, sir, here comes the lady towards my cell.”

~ William Shakespeare, from Romeo and Juliet

Soliloquy A speech in which a

character speaks thoughts aloud

Generally, character is on stage alone, not speaking to other characters

Example: Act Two, Scene 3 Romeo and Juliet, Friar Laurence has a long soliloquy

Stage Direction

an instruction written into the script of a play indicating stage actions.

Part of the script of a play that tells the actors how they are to move or to speak their lines.

Example: Enter, exit, and exeunt are stage directions.

Tragedy

A dramatic work that presents the downfall of a dignified character or characters who are involved in historically or socially significant events

Kind of play in which events turn out disastrously for the main character or characters

Most often, the hero or heroine dies

Events are set in motion by a decision that is often an error in judgment

Succeeding events are linked in a cause-and-effect relationship and lead inevitably to a disastrous conclusion, usually death

Dramatic Irony

When the audience knows something that the characters do not

Helps build suspense

Example: The audience is aware of Romeo and Juliet’s tragic demise long before the characters face it.

Comic Relief A humorous scene or

speech intended to lighten the mood

Serves to heighten the seriousness of the main action by contrast

Comic relief often takes the form of a bumbling, wisecracking sidekick.

Examples:

“Donkey” in Shrek Jack Sparrow in Pirates of the Carribean

The EndThe End