Using Figurative Language Writing Center Workshop.

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Transcript of Using Figurative Language Writing Center Workshop.

Using Figurative Language

Writing Center Workshop

Figures of speech can add excitement and variety to writing. When these expressions are understood, they can give a work a depth and richness not present otherwise; when not understood, they can confuse the reader.

Alliteration

• Definition: The repetitious use of the same beginning consonant sound in two or more nearby words.

• Example: “The ballot is stronger than the bullet.”

– Abraham Lincoln

Allusion

• Definition: A reference, usually brief, to a person, place, thing, or event with which the reader is presumably familiar. The allusion lets the reader condense great meaning into only a few words. Allusions often refer to mythology, history, religious and literary texts, etc.

• Example: “He has the patience of Job.”

Apostrophe

• Definition: A figure of speech addressing an absent person as if he or she were present or an abstract concept or inanimate object as if it were capable of understanding.

• Example: The poet’s addressing the urn in “Ode to a Grecian Urn” by John Keats is an example of an apostrophe.

Epithet

• Definition: An adjective used to limit a noun which it cannot logically modify.

• Examples: dusty deathrosy-fingered dawnwine-dark sea

Hyperbole

• Definition: An exaggeration to make emphasis and heighten the overall effect (comic or serious) of a work.

• Example: “This backpack weighs a ton!”

Irony

• Definition: A contrast between appearance and reality.

• Types of Irony:• Verbal• Dramatic• Situational

Verbal Irony

• Definition: A difference between what is literally said and what is actually meant.

• Example: “Well, thanks a lot!” (spoken when someone has not been at all helpful)

Dramatic Irony

• Definition: When the reader or audience knows that the situation is exactly the opposite of what the participants think it is.

• Example: In William Shakespeare’s Othello, the audience knows Iago is the villain, but Othello believes Iago is his most trusted friend.

Situational Irony

• Definition: When the outcome of circumstances is the opposite of what is expected or appropriate.

• Example: In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, Dimmesdale is found to be a liar and an adulterer, but he is also a clergyman.

Metaphor

• Definition: A comparison of two unlike objects without the use of the word like or as.

• Example: “The cat's eyes were jewels, gleaming out of the darkness.”

Metonymy

• Definition: Substituting a word with a term meaning an object closely associated with the original word.

• Example: Using “The White House” when referring to the President is an example of metonymy.

Onomatopoeia

• Definition: Using a word (or a group of words) whose sound reinforces its meaning.

• Examples: buzzpopfizz

Oxymoron

• Definition: A figure of speech which brings together contradictory terms for rhetorical effect.

• Examples: living deathsweet sorrowcheerful pessimist

Paradox

• Definition: An apparently self-contradictory statement which seems absurd at first but turns out to have a valid meaning.

• Examples: “The child is father to the man.”

– William Wordsworth

Personification

• Definition: Giving human attributes and/or feelings to an idea or thing as if it were human.

• Examples: a wicked tonguea lonely roada lazy day

Pun

• Definition: A play on words which uses words that sound alike but have different meanings.

• Example: “The dentist joined the infantry because he liked to drill.”

Simile

• Definition: A comparison of two unlike objects using the word like or as.

• Example: “My love is like a red, red rose.”

– Robert Burns

Symbol

• Definition: Any word, object, character, or action used to stand for something else, embodying and evoking a range of additional significance and meaning.

• Example: In Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad uses a journey up the Congo River to symbolize an exploration of the dark side of the human heart and human civilization.

Synecdoche

• Definition: Use of a part to signify the whole or, more rarely, the whole to signify a part.

• Examples: wheels = automobilesteel = swordthe law = police officer

References

• Definitions and examples taken from Pickering and Hoeper’s Literature, 1990.

• Other examples taken from:• http://web.uvic.ca/wguide/Pages/LTEpithet.html• http://humanities.byu.edu/rhetoric/Figures/S/synecdoche.htm• http://www.bartleby.com/61/70/S0967000.html• http://www.geocities.com/sir_john_eh/scarletletter.html • http://www.spellingpolice.com/higher/metaphor.html• http://www.spellingpolice.com/higher/pun.html