This week, be on the lookout for examples of Figurative Language.
Write the complete sentence, what it means and the page number.
For example, in Mr. Lincoln's Way the principal calls the students "his little birds". The atrium became much more beautiful when all the different colored birds began to visit. His comparing the children to birds is meaning that our differences create interesting and beautiful experiences.
"Fact is, all of you children here - with all of your cool differences are my little birds. Yes, my little birds." p. 22.
Here are the types of figurative language we have studied in class:
• metaphor – a thing representing another thing (e.g., a blanket of snow)
• simile – comparing two things using the linking words like or as (e.g., as sweet as sugar)
• alliteration – repetition of a sound or letter (e.g., the slimy, slithering snake)
• personification – giving human characteristics to inanimate objects (e.g., the wind
whispered her name)
• onomatopoeia – words that represent noises (e.g., whoosh, buzz, splat)
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeletecan you guess?
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeletepage 125 I got
ReplyDelete"The world looked like an enormous coloring book that had never been used." It is a simile.
here is a similie :The world looked LIKE an enormous coloring book that had never been used.
ReplyDeletethat is the same simile I was thinking!
ReplyDeletepg.16-17.
ReplyDeleteThe flowers shone as if they'd been cleaned and polished,and the trees that lined the road shimmered silvery green.
[alliteration]