Simile = compares two unlike things by using the comparative words like or as to suggest they are...

9
Simile Simile = compares two unlike things = compares two unlike things by using the comparative words by using the comparative words like like or or as as to suggest they are one and to suggest they are one and the same thing. the same thing. Example: “Life is like a box of chocolates.” Explanation: Life is like a box of chocolates because of the many choices one has to make. Metaphor Metaphor = compares two unlike = compares two unlike things without using the comparative things without using the comparative words words like like or or as as to suggest they are to suggest they are one and the same thing. one and the same thing.

Transcript of Simile = compares two unlike things by using the comparative words like or as to suggest they are...

Page 1: Simile = compares two unlike things by using the comparative words like or as to suggest they are one and the same thing.  Example: “Life is like a.

SimileSimile = compares two unlike things by = compares two unlike things by using the comparative words using the comparative words likelike or or asas to suggest they are one and the same to suggest they are one and the same thing.thing.Example: “Life is like a box of chocolates.”Explanation: Life is like a box of

chocolates because of the many choices one has to make.

MetaphorMetaphor = compares two unlike = compares two unlike things without using the comparative things without using the comparative words words likelike or or asas to suggest they are one to suggest they are one and the same thing.and the same thing.

Page 2: Simile = compares two unlike things by using the comparative words like or as to suggest they are one and the same thing.  Example: “Life is like a.

Example = “Life is a box of chocolates.”Example = “Life is a box of chocolates.”Explanation = The choices we face in Explanation = The choices we face in

life are as varied and unknown as the life are as varied and unknown as the flavors hidden in chocolates in a box.flavors hidden in chocolates in a box.

Analogy = compares two things, which are alike in several respects, for the purpose of explaining or clarifying some unfamiliar or difficult idea or object by showing how the idea or object is similar to some familiar one

Page 3: Simile = compares two unlike things by using the comparative words like or as to suggest they are one and the same thing.  Example: “Life is like a.

Example = “For answers Example = “For answers successfully arrived at are successfully arrived at are solutions to difficulties previously solutions to difficulties previously discussed, and one cannot untie discussed, and one cannot untie a knot if he is ignorant of it.” --a knot if he is ignorant of it.” --Aristotle Aristotle

Explanation = In order to arrive Explanation = In order to arrive at a solution, we must know what at a solution, we must know what the problem isthe problem is

Page 4: Simile = compares two unlike things by using the comparative words like or as to suggest they are one and the same thing.  Example: “Life is like a.

Irony = is when one outcome is expected, but the opposite occurs, usually with a coincidental twist of events.Example: An earthquake occurring during an earthquake drill

Page 5: Simile = compares two unlike things by using the comparative words like or as to suggest they are one and the same thing.  Example: “Life is like a.

Verbal Irony = Where one thing is said, but another, opposite meaning is inferred.Example: Hannibal the cannibal said, “I’d love to have you over for dinner.”

Dramatic Irony = occurs when the audience knows something a character does not and the outcome or meaning is the opposite of what the character expects.

Page 6: Simile = compares two unlike things by using the comparative words like or as to suggest they are one and the same thing.  Example: “Life is like a.

A symbol has meaning in itself, but stands for something else. However, a symbol is not what it symbolizes.

For example, a dove is a bird, but when used as a symbol it represents peace. If the dove dies, peace does not die.

Page 7: Simile = compares two unlike things by using the comparative words like or as to suggest they are one and the same thing.  Example: “Life is like a.

Likewise, the American flag is a piece of cloth with red and white bars and white stars on a blue field. It symbolizes the United States of America and, to some, freedom. However, if someone burned the flag, the only thing that has been destroyed is a piece of cloth. The United States still exists, as well as freedom.

Page 8: Simile = compares two unlike things by using the comparative words like or as to suggest they are one and the same thing.  Example: “Life is like a.

Allegory is a form of extended metaphor, in which objects, persons, and actions in a narrative, are equated with the meanings that lie outside the narrative itself. The underlying meaning has moral, social, religious, or political significance, and characters are often personifications of abstract ideas such as charity, greed, or envy. Thus an allegory is a story with two meanings, a literal meaning and a symbolic meaning.

Page 9: Simile = compares two unlike things by using the comparative words like or as to suggest they are one and the same thing.  Example: “Life is like a.

Example: While the literal Example: While the literal meaning of meaning of The CrucibleThe Crucible focuses focuses on the Salem Witch Trials, its on the Salem Witch Trials, its symbolic meaning (or allegorical symbolic meaning (or allegorical meaning) is about the Red meaning) is about the Red Scare and McCarthyism.Scare and McCarthyism.