Simile. Example: "She ran like the wind."
Simile. It shows the character is nervous, excited, or frightened (strong heartbeat).
Identify the figure of speech: "The classroom was a zoo." What type is this, and why?
What is an example of hyperbole? Write one sentence that uses hyperbole to show someone is very hungry.
Hyperbole example: "I'm so hungry I could eat a horse."
When someone says, "It's raining cats and dogs," what figurative device is being used? Is it literal or figurative? Explain.
Idiom; figurative, not literal. It exaggerates heavy rain; people don't mean actual animals are falling
A poem repeats a word, phrase, or line for emphasis. What is this device called? Provide a one-line example using the word "home."
Repetition (or refrain). Example: "Home, home, where my heart belongs."
Authors use sensory details to help readers imagine scenes. Give one example of figurative language that uses smell and explain its effect.
Example: "The kitchen smelled like warm cinnamon rolls, wrapping him in memories of Sunday mornings." Device: simile/personification of smell as wrapping; Effect: evokes nostalgia and comfort through smell
Paragraph for Prose 500: "Jon pushed open the classroom door and walked in with a cloak of silence trailing him. His thoughts were heavy stones in his pockets, but he set them down and smiled at Maya, sunlight breaking through a cloudy morning."
Possible identification and explanation: (a) "cloak of silence" — metaphor (compares silence to a cloak) showing he feels withdrawn or protected by silence. (b) "thoughts were heavy stones in his pockets" — metaphor/simile (metaphor) showing burden or sadness. "Sunlight breaking through a cloudy morning" — metaphor/imagery showing a mood lift or hope. Each device reveals mood (withdrawn and burdened, then hopeful) without naming emotions
Explanation: Figurative language can confuse English learners because meanings aren't literal and depend on cultural knowledge. Strategies: (a) Teach idioms