24
Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect.

Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Figures of Speech

A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect.

Page 2: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Simile

• Simile is a figure in which a comparison is made between two objects of different kinds, which are alike at least in one point. In this figure the words like: ‘like’, ‘as’, ‘so’ are always used.

E.g. 1. He is as strong as a lion. 2. Helen was like a lovely rose.

Page 3: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Metaphor

• Metaphor is a figure in which a comparison is made between two objects of different kinds, which are alike at least in one point, in this figure the words: ‘like’, ‘as’, ‘so’ are not used. In other words, it is an implied simile.

E.g. 1. The camel is the ship of the desert.

2. His mind is a magazine of knowledge.

Page 4: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Personification

• Personification is a figure in which objects without life are spoken of as having the qualities' of human being.

E.g. 1. The earth thirst for rain; when it

rains she smiles with plenty. 2. Death lays his icy hand on kings.

Page 5: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Apostrophe

• Which the speaker addresses some inanimate thing or some abstract ideas as if it were a living person or some absent person as if he were present.

E.g. 1. Oh judgment! Thou are fled to

brutish beasts. 2. O wild west wind! Thou breath of

autumn's being.

Page 6: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Antitheses

• In antitheses a striking opposition of contrast of words or feeling is made in the same sentence. It is employed to source emphasis.

E.g. 1. to err is human, to forgive divine. 2. man proposes, god disposes.

Page 7: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Epigram

• An epigram is a brief pointed saying often in poetical form, frequently introducing antithetical ideas which excite surprise and arrest attention; it closely resembles a proverb.

E.g. 1. A favorite has no friend. 2. Fools rush on where angels fear to

tread.

Page 8: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Paradox

• Paradox is figure of speech in which a truth is conveyed under the form of an apparent absurdity of contradiction.

E.g. 1. The child is father of the man. 2.There is no one so poor as a

wealthy miser.

Page 9: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Oxymoron

• An oxymoron is a figure by which two contradictory qualities are predicted at one and the same time. An adjective is added to a word of quite a contrary meaning.

E.g. 1. She accepted it as the kind cruelty

of the surgeon's knife. 2. parting is such sweet sorrow.

Page 10: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Irony

• Irony is the use of words, the natural meaning of which is just the opposite of what is intended to be expressed. we say one thing but mean just the opposite.

E.G 1.For Brutus is an honorable man. 2. A find friend you are to forsake me

in my trouble.

Page 11: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Euphemism

• Euphemism is a figure by means of which we speak in pleasing or favorable terms of an unpleasant or bad thing.

E.g. 1. She has not the best of temples. 2. You are telling me a fairy tale.

Page 12: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Litotes

• Litotes is the use of negative to express a strong affirmative of the opposite kind.

E.g. 1. I can assure you he is no fool. 2. The first flight across the channel

was no small achievement.

Page 13: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Metonymy

• Metonymy means “a change of name” and is so called because in this figure a thing is spoken of not by its own name, but by the name of some conspicuous accompaniment.

E.g. 1. You must address the chair. 2. From the cradle to the grave, life is

as struggle.

Page 14: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Synecdoche

• Synecdoche or “the understanding of one thing by means of another”. By this figure one noun is changed for another of a similar meaning.

E.g. 1. Give us this day our daily bread. 2. Uneasy lies the head that wears a

crow.

Page 15: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Interrogation or Rhetorical question

• It is a statement thrown into the form of a question for emphasis. No answer is expected to much question.

E.g. 1. What female heart can gold

despise? 2. Are we not the finest people in the

world?

Page 16: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Exclamation

• It is a figure in which the exclamatory form is used to draw grater attention to a point than a mere bald statement of it could do.

E.g. 1. What a piece of work is man! 2. How beautiful Helen of trey was!

Page 17: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Climax

• Climax is a figure in which the sense rise by successive steps to what is more and more important and impressive.

E.g. 1. I came, I saw, I conquered. 2. He begs, he lies, he steals, he kills

for gold.

Page 18: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Anti climax or Bathos

• This is the opposite of climax and signifies a descent from the higher to the lower.

E.g. 1. The soldier fights for glory and a

shilling a day. 2. I die, I faint, I fail.

Page 19: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Hyperbole

• Hyperbole is a greatly exaggerated statement, used mainly for effect, but not intended to be taken literally.

E.g. 1. It is an age since we met. 2. I was bored to death by his

ceaseless chatter.

Page 20: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Transferred epithet

• In this figure an epithet is transferred from a word to which it properly belongs to some other word closely connected with it.

E.g. 1. He stood upon the dizzy cliff. 2. He passed a sleepless night.

Page 21: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Tautology

• Tautology is the use of unnecessary words to express the same idea.

E.g. 1. Pure unadulterated milk is sold here 2. Let us join it together.

Page 22: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Pun

• A pun is a play upon words. E.g. 1. Not on thy sole, on they soul, harsh

Jew. 2. Nell of troy was the death knell of

troy.

Page 23: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Alliteration

• Alliteration consists in the repetition of the same latter or syllable at the beginning of two or more words.

E.g. 1. Full fathom five thy father lies. 2. The lordly lion leaves his lonely lair.

Page 24: Figures of Speech A figure of speech is a deviation from the ordinary use of words with a view to increasing their effect

Onomatopoeia

• Onomatopoeia is the employment of words that imitate the sound or echo the sense.

E.g. 1. Doves are cooing, bees buzzing,

and cattle lowing. 2. Our echoes roll from soul to soul.