Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

26
Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion

Transcript of Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Page 1: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Figurative Language

Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom,

Hyperbole, and Allusion

Page 2: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Metaphor

• When two seemingly unlike objects are compared to each other without using comparing words such as ‘like’, ‘as’, ‘seems’, or ‘than’.

Page 3: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Examples

• The bright sun is an orange that could be picked right out of the sky and eaten.

• What two objects are being compared?

• What does this metaphor mean?

Page 4: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Examples

• The teacher swooped in quickly and snatched the note from the student’s hand with her sharp, greedy, talons.

• What two things are being compared?

• What does this metaphor mean?

Page 5: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Examples

• The large, round, bowling ball of a defensive tackle sped down the alley and crashed into the quarterback.

• What objects are being compared?• What does this metaphor mean?

Page 6: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Now it’s your turn!

• With your partner, create two of your own original metaphors.

• Write down what objects are being compared and what your metaphor means.

• Share your metaphors with the class.

Page 7: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Simile

• Compares to seemingly unlike objects using comparing words such as ‘like’, ‘as’, ‘seems’, or ‘than.’

Page 8: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Examples

• The bright glowing sun looked as if it could be plucked right out of the sky and eaten.

• What two objects are being compared?

• What does this simile mean?

Page 9: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Examples

• Turning, they ran to the front of the building lined up in two long lines, and marching like little tin soldiers disappeared inside the school.

• What objects are being compared?• What does this simile mean?

Page 10: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Examples

• He just lay there in the sunshine, all stretched out and limber as a rag.

• What objects are being compared?• What does this simile mean?

Page 11: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Time Outby Jana Ghossein

Help! Oh how much my heart hurts!My mouth is as dry as a desert. My throat is sore.My voice is a goner.My heart is beating as fast as a tiger. My hand is a rattling snake. My face is a tomato. Bye bye, boring life.I cannot take it anymore.I lay my head, upon my knee.Now blow the whistle referee! 

Page 12: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Now it’s your turn!

• With your partner, create two of your own original similes.

• Write down what objects are being compared and what your simile means.

• Share your similes with the class.

Page 13: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Metaphor or Simile?

• Read the following examples of metaphors or similes.

• Determine if the sentence is a metaphor or a simile.

• Explain how you know.• Be able to tell the class what objects are

being compared and what the metaphor or simile means.

Page 14: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Metaphor or Simile?

• By the time I had reached the river, every nerve in my body was drawn up as tight as a fiddle string.

• Like a king in his own domain, it towered far above the smaller trees.

Page 15: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Metaphor or Simile?

• “You had better get out of there,” I said. “If that tree takes a notion to fall, it’ll mash you flatter than a tadpoles tail.”

• “The streets were a furnace, and the sun an executioner.”

Page 16: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Metaphor or Simile?

• The rain fell from the sky in long, sharp needles and struck me as I ran to shelter.

• We are all ants working tirelessly, day to day for all eternity, to fulfill the whims of the queen.

Page 17: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Personification

• Figurative language when a non-human objects is given human characteristics or traits.

Page 18: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Examples

• The wind whistled a gloomy tune as it blew through darkening forest.

• Thousands of blades of grass massaged my back while I lay staring at the cloudless sky.

• What is being personified?• What does each personification mean?

Page 19: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Examples

• “Fear knocked on the door. Faith answered. There was no one there.”

• "Pimento eyes bulged in their olive sockets. Lying on a ring of onion, a tomato slice exposed its seedy smile . . .."

• What is being personified?

Page 20: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Now it’s your turn!

• With your partner, create two of your own original examples of personification.

• Write down what objects are being personified and what human qualities they are given.

• Share your personification with the class.

Page 21: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

WindBy J. Kurnath

The wind dances in onTrotting horses’ feetIt stops in a goldenValley looking about throughFiery eyes, and then rages pastAt a mighty gallop.

Page 22: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Create Your OwnNature Personication Poem

• Directions:• Line 1   Title + (How it arrives or begins) 

• Line 2   Tell what it does • Line 3   Tell how it does it • Line 4   Tell where it is • Line 5 Tell how it leaves 

Page 23: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Hyperbole

• An extreme exaggeration or overstatement.

Page 24: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Examples

• I am so hungry I could eat a horse.• I have a million things to do.• I had to walk 15 miles to school in the snow,

uphill.• I had a ton of homework.• If I can’t buy that new game, I will die.• He is as skinny as a toothpick.• This car goes faster than the speed of light.

Page 25: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Appetite

• In a house the size of a postage stamplived a man as big as a barge.His mouth could drink the entire riverYou could say it was rather largeFor dinner he would eat a trillion beansAnd a silo full of grain,Washed it down with a tanker of milkAs if he were a drain.

Page 26: Figurative Language Metaphors, Similes, Personification, Idiom, Hyperbole, and Allusion.

Thanksgiving

• A mountain of baby carrots,a turkey the size of a cow.a river full of gravya dog that says meowEvery pie known to manand gallons full of ice cream.By the time my dinner is overI surely won’t be lean.