"Say What You Mean" Simile and Metaphor
"Sound it Out!" Alliteration and Onomatopoeia
"It's Alive!" Personification
"It's an Expression!" (Idiom and Cliche)
"Paint a Picture!" (Imagery and Hyperbole)
100

“She was as busy as a bee.” What kind of figurative language is this?

Simile

100

“Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.” What type of figurative language?

Alliteration

100

What is personification?

Giving human traits to nonhuman things

100

What does “break a leg” mean?

Good luck

100

What is imagery?

Language that appeals to the five senses

200

“The classroom was a zoo.” What is being compared here?

The classroom is being compared to a zoo

200

What does onomatopoeia mean?

A word that imitates a sound

200

“The wind whispered through the trees.” What is the human trait used here?

Whispering

200

What is an idiom?

A phrase whose meaning isn’t literal

200

“I’m so hungry I could eat a horse.” What is this?

Hyperbole (exaggeration)

300

Which sentence is a metaphor?
 A) The car was as fast as lightning.
 B) The car was a rocket on wheels.

B

300

Identify the onomatopoeia: “The bacon sizzled in the pan.”

Sizzled

300

Write a personification for the sun.

(Answers vary — e.g., “The sun smiled down on us.”)

300

Which phrase is a cliché?
 A) “Fit as a fiddle.”
 B) “He’s a diamond in the rough.”

A – Fit as a fiddle

300

Choose the sentence with imagery:
 A) “The cake smelled sweet and buttery.”
 B) “The cake was good.”

A

400

Create your own simile to describe someone who is very brave.

Answers will vary — e.g., “brave as a lion.”

400

Make up your own alliterative phrase using the letter “S.”

(Answers will vary — e.g., “Silly snakes slither silently.”)

400

Why do authors use personification?

To make writing more vivid or emotional

400

Explain the idiom: “Spill the beans.”

Reveal a secret

400

Write an example of hyperbole to describe being tired.

(Answers vary — e.g., “I could sleep for a year!”)

500

Explain the difference between a simile and a metaphor, using an example of each.

Simile uses “like/as”; metaphor does not. Example: Simile: “cold as ice.” Metaphor: “Her heart was ice.”

500

Choose the line that uses both alliteration and onomatopoeia:
 A) “The big bear snored softly.”
 B) “The bee buzzed by the blooming bush."

B

500

Identify all the personification in this sentence: “The stars danced and winked at us as we fell asleep.”

Stars danced; stars winked

500

Create a sentence using a cliché, then explain what it means.

(Answers vary — e.g., “Time heals all wounds” means emotional pain gets better over time.)

500

Describe a stormy night using imagery (at least two senses).

(Answers vary — e.g., “Lightning cracked across the sky as the rain soaked my skin.”)