Sound and Word Play
Comparisons
Feelings
Surprise and Meaning
Exaggeration and Effect
100

This device repeats the same beginning sound in words like “wild windy weather.”

Alliteration

100

A comparison using “like” or “as.”

Simile

100

The feeling the reader gets from the story.

Mood

100

When what happens is the opposite of what is expected.

Irony

100

“He runs like the wind.”

Simile

200

A word that sounds like the noise it describes, such as “buzz” or “bang.”

Onomatopoeia

200

A comparison that does NOT use “like” or “as.”

Metaphor

200

The writer’s attitude about the subject.

Tone

200

“He was so nervous before the test that he had butterflies in his stomach.”

Idiom

200

“My backpack weighs a ton.”

Hyperbole

300

Two opposite words placed together, like “jumbo shrimp.”

Oxymoron

300

Calling something that is not human by giving it human traits, like “the sun smiled.”

Personification

300

Language that appeals to the five senses.

Imagery

300

“The warm smell of fresh bread floated through the quiet kitchen.”

Imagery

300

“It was a seriously funny movie.”

Oxymoron

400

A phrase that means something different than what the words literally say, like “spill the beans.”

Idiom

400

An object or person that stands for something bigger, like a dove meaning peace.

Symbol

400

“Time is a thief.”

Metaphor

400

“The white dove flew into the sky, a symbol of peace.”

Symbolism

400

A fire station burns down.

Irony

500

Saying something is much more than the truth for effect, like “I could eat a million burgers.”

Overstatement

500

A reference to a famous person, story, or event, like mentioning Odysseus.

Allusion

500

An extreme exaggeration, like “I’ve told you a thousand times!”

Hyperbole

500

“She was as brave as Katniss when she volunteered.”

Allusion

500

“Busy bees buzzed by.”

Alliteration