Figurative Language:
Using
words in a non-literal, imaginative way to create a picture in the mind of
the reader.
Personification: describing
animals or inanimate objects as if they had human qualities. For example:
Metaphor: An
imaginative comparison between two unlike things stated
literally but meant
at a non-literal level. For
example:
Simile: An
imaginative comparison between two unlike things using the connecting words
"as" or "like." For example:
Hyperbole: Exaggeration
beyond the truth, to make a point. For
example:
1.
" That old stone wall
has been standing there for a million years."
2.
"His mind was filled with thousands of
pictures."
3.
"I could eat a horse."
1. “A stone wall around a farmhouse is much like a sentinel standing guard. It is designed to be on duty all the time and it provides a defense against intruders. It is reliable and strong, allowing the occupants of the house to sleep peacefully.” [The use of the word "like" suggests a simile, but because the points of comparison are multiple and literally stated, it is actually an analogy.The same is true in the example below.]
2. “The eye works very much like a camera. It has a pupil which opens and closes like the camera aperture depending on the amount of light it receives, and it’s lens focuses the image upside down on the retina, just as the camera focuses the image upside down on the film in the back of the camera.”