Brandon's Figurative Language

2020. 2. 10. 04:31카테고리 없음

DIRECTIONS: Write four sentences to describe this picture. Use any of the following types of figurative language. Then identify the kind you use. Figurative Language Worksheets. This bundle contains 15 ready-to-use figurative language worksheets that are perfect for students to learn about and identify the seven common types of figurative language: simile, metaphor, idioms, personification, onomatopoeia, alliteration and hyperbole.

Definition Figurative language in literature is the use of language figures to express a non – literal meaning of a given utterance. The figurative language is used to give more expressiveness to the speech or to broaden the meaning of a word. In addition, it also serves to create different meanings or to communicate well in the case when the author can not find a suitable term to express his thought. The interpretation of figurative language may depend on the context of each individual because this is a type of unconventional language that is not based on the usual norms of communication.

A poet or writer can choose a particular concept to tie it with an idea, in many cases totally personal and not necessarily coincident. It is about using a word in a different sense from what it represents in the dictionary to relate it to an idea or feeling. Meaning of figurative language Figurative language is used to amplify the meaning of a word, term or expression lending greater expressiveness or artistic quality to a given utterance or speech. The culture, origin, formation, and intentions of one individual or another may cause figurative language to manifest itself in very different ways at different times, given the fact that there are no rules, norms, or academic conventions on which it can lean. And so the understanding of the meaning of a sentence in which the figure of language appears will depend on the capacity of the listener to interpret it. Related to semantics, figurative language is composed of particular figures of language, which serve as elements of structuring language.

It is the opposite of literary language, which uses words in their true meaning. Among the figures of language, one can find such figures as a metaphor, hyperbole, euphemism, irony, ellipsis, comparison, antithesis, paradox, pleonasm, synesthesia, alliteration, asymmetry, and others. All of the mentioned figures are used in different situations and for the different purposes. For example, the metaphor represents a comparison of words with different meanings and whose comparative term is implied in the sentence.

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List Of Figurative Language Examples

The comparison, unlike metaphor, is used with comparison connectives (like, so, such), the hyperbole corresponds to intentional exaggeration in the expression, the euphemism is used to smooth the speech. The irony is the representation of the opposite of what is claimed, and the antithesis is the use of terms that have opposite meanings. Examples of figurative language in literature Examples of figurative language can be found in the literature of all times. In Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet,” Romeo uses the metaphor: “But, soft! What light through yonder window breaks?

It is the east, and Juliet is the sun.” In “Pride and Prejudice” by Jane Austen one can find a use of hyperbole: “from the first moment I may almost say, of my acquaintance with you, your manners impressing me with the fullest belief of your arrogance, your conceit, and your selfish disdain of the feelings of others, were such as to form that ground-work of disapprobation, on which succeeding events have built so immovable a dislike”.