Sensory Language
Figurative Language
Figurative Language II
ELA Grab Bag
Potpourri
100

"At my own place, I love a spicy boudin noir that squirts blood in your mouth; the braised fennel the way my sous-chef makes it; scraps from duck confit; and fresh cockles steamed with greasy Portuguese sausage."

-Anthony Bourdain, The New Yorker



What is taste 

100

Repeated consonant sounds at the beginning of several words in a phrase ("Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers...")


What is alliteration

100

Making an inanimate object or animal act like a person ("lightning danced across the sky")

What is personification 

100

The most common letter in the English language 

What is "e"

100

Often mistaken for a vegetable, and becoming trendy on toast, this food is actually a fruit

What is avocado 

200

“So when the blue smoke of brittle leaves was in the air and the wind blew the wet laundry stiff on the line I decided to come back home.”
― F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby

What is sight, touch

200

An extreme exaggeration ("I slept like a rock last night")



What is hyperbole

200

A comparison of two unlike things that suggests a similarity between the two items ("love is a rose")

What is a metaphor

200

The shortest complete sentence in English 

What is "I am"

200

The only part of the human body that cannot heal itself 

What are teeth

300

“For lunch, we drove into the hills and parked in the dappled shade of a big sycamore, its powdery white bark like a woman's body against the uncanny blue sky.”
― Janet Fitch, White Oleander

What is sight

300

A comparison using "like" or "as" ("She sings like an angel") 

What is a simile

300

A form of word play that exploits multiple meanings of a term, or of similar-sounding words, for an intended humorous or rhetorical effect

What is a pun

300

 In chess, this word comes from the Persian phrase "Shah Mat" meaning "the king is helpless".

What is "Checkmate"

300

This tiny crustacean carries it's heart in it's head

What is a shrimp

400

“A wine shop was open and I went in for some coffee. It smelled of early morning, of swept dust, spoons in coffee-glasses and the wet circles left by wine glasses.”
― Ernest Hemingway, A Farewell to Arms

What is sight, smell

400

The opposite of what is meant (describing someone who says foolish things a “genius” or stating during a thunderstorm, “beautiful weather we’re having”)

What is irony

400

The name for words that sound like what they are (POP! BAM! Slosh)


What is onomatopoeia

400

A word, phrase, or sequence that reads the same backward as forward

What is a palindrome

400

There’s only one letter that doesn’t appear in any American state name

What is "Q"

500

“I would wake with her weight tilting our mattress, her Shalimar settling over me when she leaned to kiss me and pull up the chenille bedspread, which had a nubble like Braille under my hands…I could feel through the bedspread the faint heat of her body as she sat a few inches from where I lay, that heat was all I needed.”

-"The Liars' Club" by Mary Karr

What is touch

500

 A phrase that people say that is commonly accepted as having a different meaning then what is literally said ("that Minecraft game cost an arm and a leg")

What is an idiom

500

The use of symbols to express or represent ideas or qualities in literature, art etc. 

What is symbolism 

500

Two or more words having the same pronunciation but different meanings, origins, or spelling, for example new and knew.

What are homophones 

500

This city established America's first public beach and built America's first subway!

What is Boston

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