Figurative Language Flashcards
Allusion
a reference in a literary work to a person, place, or thing in history or another work of literature.
- Example: I have experienced lonely times when I wanted to click my ruby slippers and say, “There’s no place like home.”
- Tone: The author’s word choice in this example communicates a tone of acceptance.
- Mood: The author’s diction creates a melancholy mood.
This is an allusion to Dorothy’s famous line in The Wizard of Oz.
Hyperbole
a figure of speech that uses exaggeration for emphasis.
- Example: The mean girl’s words felt like a million knives.
- Tone: The author’s word choice in this example communicates a matter-of-fact tone.
- Mood: The author’s diction creates a sympathetic mood.
Irony
a figure of speech in which words convey the opposite of their literal meaning, or a situation is contradictory to what one would expect.
Metaphor
a comparison of two unlike things that does not use comparison words. One thing directly represents another.
- Example: In some cultures, women are an untouchable plague.
- Tone: The author’s word choice in this example communicates an observant tone.
- Mood: The author’s diction creates a shocking mood.
Rhetorical Question
a question asked for effect rather than an actual answer.
- Example: “How many years can some people exist before they are allowed to be free?” —”Blowin’ in the Wind”
- Tone: The author’s word choice in this example communicates a matter-of-fact tone.
- Mood: The author’s diction creates a depressing mood.
Simile
a comparison of two unlike things that uses “like” or “as.”
- Example: The students felt that the scholarship to the new school was like a blank check for a bright future.
- Tone: The author’s word choice in this example communicates a detached tone.
- Mood: The author’s diction creates a hopeful mood.
Paradox
A statement that appears to contradict itself but can be true.
- Example: The weak will be strong
- Tone: The author’s word choice in this example communicates a factual tone
- Mood: The author’s diction creates a hopeful mood
Personification
a type of metaphor in which nonliving or nonhuman things are given human characteristics or abilities.
- Example: The family desperately needed to move out of the decaying house that groaned and moaned every time someone entered
- Tone: The author’s word choice in this example communicates a desperate tone
- Mood: The author’s diction creates a melancholy mood