Types of Imagery
Types of Creative-NonFiction
Types of Figurative Language
Types of Figurative Language
Bonus Question
100

appeals to the sense of sight and helps readers imagine what something looks like.

Visual imagery


100

writings that share the author’s personal thoughts or experiences.

Personal essays

100

compares two things using “like” or “as.”

Simile

100

expresses the opposite of what is expected or meant.

Irony

100

Name Of School

Paharang Integrated School

200

appeals to the sense of hearing and describes sounds.

auditory

200

is a story of a person’s life written by someone else.  

biography

200

directly compares two things without using “like” or “as.”

Metaphor

200

uses an object or action to represent a deeper meaning.

Symbolism

200

FULL Name of Subject Teacher

Frensey Jyneth I. Delos Reyes

300

appeals to the sense of smell and describes scents or odors.

Olfactory

300

is a story of a person’s life written by that person.

autobiography

300

gives human qualities to nonhuman things.

Personification

300

a common expression whose meaning is different from its literal words.

Idiom

300

Subject teacher middle NAME

ILAO

400

appeals to the sense of taste and describes flavors.

gustatory

400

are stories about meaningful moments or periods in the author’s life.

memoirs

400

uses extreme exaggeration to emphasize a point.

Hyperbole

400

combines two opposite words for effect.

Oxymoron

400

Principal Name

Dr. Lilibeth M. Virtus

500

appeals to the sense of touch and describes textures or feelings on the skin.

Tactile

500

reports real events using storytelling techniques.

Literary Journalism

500

uses words that imitate sounds.

Onomatopoeia

500

repeats the same beginning sound in nearby words.

Alliteration

500

School ID

301474

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