The first example of figurative language is in Lord Bryon’s poem, “She Walks in Beauty.” Right away figurative speech is included in the first line, “She walks in beauty, like the night Of cloudless climes and starry skies.” This line compares the woman’s beauty to a cloudless starry night using the word “like”, thus, making it a simile. The second example can be found in “A Red, Red Rose” by Robert Burns. The line, “O my luve's like a red, red rose,” is a simile because it is comparing his love for another person to a red rose using the word “like”. The third example of figurative language can be found in Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s poem, “Sonnet 43”. The line, “I love thee freely, as men strive for Right,” is a simile as it compares her
Figurative language is when you use words or a phrase that do not have a regular, everyday literal meaning and is used by almost all authors in their writings. Authors use figurative language to make their works more interesting and more dramatic. Examples of figurative language include metaphors, similes, personification and hyperbole. Helena Maria Viramontes uses figurative language all throughout her novel Under the Feet of Jesus. In the opening paragraphs of the novel Viramontes uses imagery to set the scene for her readers, she really makes us feel as if we are riding along in the station wagon with Estrella and her 6 other family members. In this scene she describes to her readers reflects on the hardships that this family, and people
What is figurative language? Figurative language is saying something other than what is meant for effect. For example a metaphor, simile, symbol, hyperbole or personification. In the sermon called Sinners in the Hand of an Angry God and the Iroquois Constitution there is a lot of figurative language.
. . .¨ This quote is showing a simile because it´s explaining when the rescue team found him it was like when those movies always has a missing person they are looking for and once they find the missing person, everyone acts like nothing happened and the movie ends after they find them. These examples show simile because the quotes are comparing something to something else or it was similar to each other.
In chapter 23 of the novel Walk Two Moons by Sharon Creech the author uses figurative language to describe the Badlands of South Dakota. When comparing the author’s vivid imagery to actual images of the Badlands it is surprising how accurate her description is. “It was as if someone had ironed out all the rest of South Dakota and smooshed all the hills and valleys and rocks into this spot. Right smack in the middle of flat plains were jagged peaks and steep gorges.” Photos of the area do show flat grassy plains surrounding tall jagged mountain ranges. I can’t tell if you could actually “stand right on the edge of the gorges and see down.” However, it does seem possible.
Figurative language includes metaphors, similes and
In your life, have you ever experienced an event so traumatic that you cannot forget it? Well, a man by the name of Elie Wiesel went through a very traumatic event in his childhood and has yet to forget it. In order to share his experience Elie decided to write the memoir Night. Throughout the entire memoir Elie used figurative language. Figurative language is something an author can use to help their reader paint a mental picture. A few examples are simile, metaphor, and imagery. Elie Wiesel uses figurative language throughout Night and in the passage describing Madame Schachter screaming about fire in the cattle car which is an example of imagery.
Tatiana de Rosnay used different literary tools to assist her writing in order to deepen the story, including figurative language, dramatic irony, and foreshadowing. The use of figurative language helps to clarify a description in order to place an image in the mind of the reader. Similes are the main type of figurative language used throughout Sarah’s Key, allowing the reader to see what is happening. Many images conjured up make comparisons as a child would make them, as much of the story concerns the innocence of a child, such as “[t]he oversized radiators were black with dirt, as scaly as a reptile” (Rosnay 10) and “[t]he bathtub has claws” (Rosnay 11). Other descriptions compare Sarah, and Zoe, to a puppy, a symbol of innocence, as children are known to be
Figurative language is used in a lot of writings to pull you more into the words. Figurative language uses the five senses to place a deep picture in your mind of what is actually happening. Metaphors, similes, personification, hyperbole, etc. are all figurative devices used in writing. Without using any of these things writing would be straight forward and not so complicated to understand. When figurative language is used it makes the reader really think about what is being said by the author and what point the author is trying to make. Both "The Iroquois Constitution” and "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” use figurative language but for different reasons.
A good example would be when the mother in the story talks about her life using a metaphor of a staircase. In the beginning of the poem, the mother says, "Well, son, I’ll tell you: Life for me ain’t been no crystal stair. It’s had tacks in it, And splinters, [...] But all the time, I’se been a-climbin’ on" (Hughes lines 1-9). This metaphor describes the mother's life experience, the reader can infer was hard, but the nice part of this excerpt is the final lines, where the metaphor of continuing to climb on the staircase is used to symbolize the mother's goal to persevere, no matter how tough life gets because she believes her efforts will accomplish something good.
An example is, when Grummore makes reference to the heir the nurse tearfully said, “never had no hair. Anybody that studied the the loyal family knowed that.” This is funny because the nurse says hair instead of heir and loyal not royal.To support his purpose and tone, the author uses literary devices such as simile and personification. Simile uses like or as to compare unrelated items. When Kay was trying to convince Sir Ector to go to London, White uses the phrase “eyes like marbles” to describe Grummore’s eyes. He also uses simile during the scene where Merlin is giving up his position as tutor and is leaving the household. White describes Archimedes as “spinning like a top” when he disappears from Merlyn's shoulder. Also, in the scene where Wart pulled the sword from the stone, thousands
Figurative language is in most well written novels. It helps develop the overall theme the author is trying to portray. In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, I noticed Harper Lee distinctively used two types of figurative language. The first is symbolism, Lee used this twice during the novel with the mockingbird representing beauty innocence and Boo Radley representing the good in people. The second is motifs, Lee used this to emphasize the small town life in Maycomb, Alabama and helps give a better understanding of the people in the town.
The speaker uses figurative language to compare a girl that he loves to the happiness of nature, and to state that he will make a special relationship end happily. Simile is a type of figurative language that compares two things using the words “like” or “as.” A simile in line five has a very powerful meaning: “Like everything that’s green, girl, I ne...
The first type of figurative language Pat Mora used that I would like to touch on is metaphors. “The family story says your voice is the voice of an aunt in Mexico, spunky as a peacock.” Mora uses this metaphor of her mother’s voice being that “of an aunt in Mexico, spunky as a peacock” to illustrate how fearless her mother is when it comes to speaking up. Through
"Sonnet 73" by William Shakespeare contains many metaphors to form a descriptive image. Shakespeare used conceits, which are "fanciful extended metaphors" (567), used in love poems of earlier centuries. Shakespeare used these beautifully in "Sonnet 73." A metaphor is a "brief, compressed comparison that talks about one thing as if it were another" (554). Shakespeare expresses three major metaphors in this sonnet. The first is about age, the second about death, and of course, love follows. These three metaphors create an enjoyable poem.
This type of sonnet is divided in 3 parts. Author William Shakespeare begins his poem with his most notorious line which is “shall I compare thee to a summers day?”(Shakespeare 771). From just viewing line one it can clearly show that it’s a simile because he is pretty much stating that he compares his/her beauty to as beautiful as like a summers day. The reason he compares them is because as we know summer days are more than usual extremely hot, windy, joyful and full of life and that’s exactly what Shakespeare is doing in this line. He is connecting both the lover and the poem together and implying that he/she is as beautiful or even more than a summer’s day. That would be categorized as a synecdone because she uses the summers day as a way to represent the whole. You can even agree that it can be considered imagery because with just that little line...