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Literary Elements Figures of Speech Part I English II

Literary Elements Figures of Speech

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Literary Elements Figures of Speech. Part I English II. You will draw this line. Write key words on this small side of the page. Directly across from the key words or topics, write the main idea/ideas that you need to remember. You may use phrases rather than complete sentences. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Literary Elements

Figures of Speech

Part I

English II

Page 2: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

You will draw this line.

Page 3: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Cornell Notes

Write key words on this small side of the page

Directly across from the key words or topics, write the main idea/ideas that you need to remember. You may use phrases rather than complete sentences.

Page 4: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Your notes will go here.Key

words will go here

Page 5: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Allusion

A reference to a person, a place, an event or a literary work which a writer expects the reader to recognize (recognized by many)

Reference can be from history, geography, literature, religion

Page 6: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Allusion

Reference to person, place, event, literary work

Recognized by many Can be history, geography,

literature, religion

Page 7: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

ALLUSION Watch this film clip and list as many

ALLUSIONS as you see ….

Page 8: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Hyperbole

A figure of speech using exaggeration for special effect

Example:

“I have a TON of homework!”

“Coach made us run a MILLION

miles!”

Page 9: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

HYPERBOLE

Turn to a neighbor and share one thing that you have already exaggerated today.

Page 10: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Imagery Words or phrases that create pictures

or images in the reader’s mind 5 senses Example: The ocean was a cool shade of

sapphire blue, with white-capped waves that lapped playfully at the sandy shore.

Page 11: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

IMAGERY Write 5 descriptive details that paint a

picture of how your bedroom looked as you left your house this morning.

Page 12: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Metaphor

Comparison between two seemingly unlike things WITHOUT using “like” or “as”

Example: She was a rose, beautiful and

delicate.

Page 13: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

METAPHOR Can you think of a metaphor that your mom

has used to describe you?

Page 14: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

OnomatopoeiaUse of words to describe soundsExamples:“Oink! Oink!” (pig snorting)“Brrrrrrrrrring…” (telephone ringing)“Zzzzz...” (student snoring)

Page 15: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

ONOMATOPOEIA What is your favorite?

Page 16: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Oxymoron

Two words that have opposite meanings used together

Example: “Civil War”, “same difference”, “pretty ugly”

Page 17: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

OXYMORONYour turn ….

Page 18: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Simile

Comparison between two seemingly unlike things using “like” or “as”

Example:

She was as beautiful as a rose.

Page 19: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

SIMILE Compare your best friend to an animal

using a simile.

Page 20: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Personification Human characteristics are given to

nonhuman things

EX: time flies

the storm howls

the trees dance in the wind

Page 21: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

PERSONIFICATION How would you personify your homework?

Page 22: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Alliteration

Repetition of the same sound at the beginning of each word, phrase, or sentence

Example:

“The lovely ladies liked lollipops.”

Page 23: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

ALLITERATION Using the first letter of either your first or

last name, write a tongue twister with at least 3 words using alliteration.

Page 24: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Symbol

When something stands for or represents something else

Often a concrete object that represents an abstract idea

Page 25: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

SYMBOL Write what these symbols represent to you:

American flag –

Heart –

Page 26: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Irony Difference between appearance vs.

reality. 3 types: Verbal – what is said is not really

what is meant (sarcasm) Dramatic – reader/audience knows

something a character does not Situational – expect one thing to

happen but what actually happens is a surprise

Page 27: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

IRONY

Page 28: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

IRONY

Page 29: Literary Elements Figures of Speech

Cornell Notes

At the end of a lecture, write down what stood out to you – main points, things you want to remember, things you still don’t understand