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Figures of Speech

Figures of speech

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Page 1: Figures of speech

Figures of Speech

Page 2: Figures of speech

Figures of Speech

• word or group of words used to give particular emphasis to an idea or sentiment

• Help explain abstract ideas by creating comparisons or other relationships between the abstraction and concrete realities

Page 3: Figures of speech

• A directly stated comparison between two unlike person or thing that uses expressions like, as and as ....... as

Example:His mind is like a sponge.

Simile

Page 4: Figures of speech

•An implied comparison between two unlike things that are alike in the way they are identified

Metaphor

Page 5: Figures of speech

• Unlike simile, no expressions are used to show the comparison in metaphor

Example:In the dark night, the

city lights are glimmering fireflies

Page 6: Figures of speech

• Leads human qualities to things that are not human – animals, plants, in animate objects and abstraction.

Personification

Page 7: Figures of speech

Example:“Will you walk

into my parlor?” said the spider to the fly

Page 8: Figures of speech

•Addresses personified objects as real person, the absent as if they were present and the dead as if were alive

Apostrophe

Page 9: Figures of speech

Example:Ambition you are

a cruel master, I will serve you no more

Page 10: Figures of speech

• A subtle metaphor, it recalls and projects on the imagination memories of the past – a well known person, event, saying or incident – to compare with the present scene.

Allusion

Page 11: Figures of speech

•The reader thus profits from the knowledge he gained

Page 12: Figures of speech

Example:Were I Midas, I

would make nothing else but such golden days of memory

Page 13: Figures of speech

• The substitution of one noun for another which it suggests but it is not base on resemblance but on association

Example:It is the rope for the

criminal (the cause – hanging with a rope for the effect – death)

Metonymy

Page 14: Figures of speech

• A type of metonymy, it gives a significant part to represent a whole

Example:The poor woman has ten

hungry mouths to feed.

Synecdoche

Page 15: Figures of speech

• From the Greek hyper, meaning “beyond” and ballein, meaning “to throw” this is a deliberate exaggeration not to deceive but to emphasize a statement, often used for humorous effect.

Example:He is such a good salesman he

could sell Manila Bay to speculators

Hyperbole

Page 16: Figures of speech

• Used to minimize the impression of the size or importance of reality or to enhance the readers impression of what is said.

• If the understatement is positive, it is called melosis; if it is a miid negative understatement, it is called litotes

Understatement

Page 17: Figures of speech

Example:Nena told her friend, I am a

bit hurt because I was not invited to your wedding. (melosis)

A kinder garden pupil made a speech at his graduation and his proud grandfather said, “Not a bad accomplishment.” (litotes)

Page 18: Figures of speech

• The use of word to signify the opposite of what is said.

• The words used express approval or praise, but the author’s real intention is blame, criticism, scorn or ridicule

• In writing, the context of irony holds the clue; in speech, the tone of the voice or manner of the speaker indicates the irony intended.

Irony