Definitions
What type of language
More Definitions
Questions on definitions
Even more questions
100

What is Hyperbole

An extreme exaggeration used to make a point.

100

What is: He had a frown that could break rocks?

A. Hyperbole

B. Alliteration

C. Metaphor

The answer is A. Hyperbole.

Another example could be: This bag weighs a ton.

100

What is a Simile?

An expression comparing two unlike things or ideas to suggest they are alike using the words like, as, than, or resembles.

100

What is: The kitchen smells of fresh baked bread hot from the oven.

A. Imagery

B. Onomatopoeia

C. Idiom

A. Imagery

Can you give another example?

100

What is: Her smile was the sun on a cloudy day.

A. Metaphor

B. Onomatopoeia

C. Idiom

A. Metaphor

200

What is an Idiom?

Expression unique to the language that cannot be taken literally. (Meaning cannot be understood by reading the words.)

200

What is: It's not worth getting involved in the argument; don't add fuel to the fire.

A. Imagery

B. Simile

C. Idiom

C. Idiom

Another example: They're trying to rip me off.

200

What is Alliteration?

The repetition of consonant sounds occurring at the beginning or inside words.

Example: She sells sea shells by the seashore.

200

What is: The sun is smiling down on me.

A. Hyperbole

B. Personification

C. Simile

B. Personification

200

What is: The house clung to the side of the cliff.

A. Personification

B. Metaphor

C. Idiom

A. Personification

300

What is a Metaphor?

An expression that directly compares two unlike things or ideas to suggest they are alike without using the words like, as, than, or resembles.

300

What is: My school is a zoo.

A. Onomatopoeia

B. Simile

C. Metaphor

C. Metaphor

Example: Maria is a chicken.

300

What is Assonance?

The repetition of vowel sounds in nearby words.

Example: "Fleet feet sweep by sleeping geese" -by Pink Floyd.

"The crumbling thunder of seas." - by Robert Louis Stevenson

300

What is: You're barking up the wrong tree.

A. Imagery

B. Idiom

C. Simile

B. Idiom

Example: It's time you cracked a book open.

300

What is: He had a laugh that could create tidal waves.

A. Alliteration

B. Metaphor

C. Hyperbole

C. Hyperbole

400

What is onomatopoeia?

Words that sound like the object or action to which they refer. Often used in cartoons, for example.

400

What is: The air smells of smoke and dead leaves, making me think autumn is here.

A. Metaphor

B. Imagery

C. Idiom

B. What is imagery.

Example: The concert was so loud that her ears rang for days afterward.

400

What is Imagery?

Describing people or objects using language that appeals to our senses (sight, sound, smell, touch, taste).

Example: The clouds were edged with gold and pink.

400

What is: The house was as red as Santa's hat.

A. Simile

B. Idiom

C. Metaphor

A. Simile

Why is is a simile?

400

What is: Zoom! The car sped down the street.

A. Personification

B. Metaphor

C. Onomatopoeia

C. Onomatopoeia

500

What is Personification?

The act of giving human qualities to animals or inanimate objects.

500

What is: The old man was a turtle slowly making his way across town.

A. Metaphor

B. Onomatopoeia

C. Idiom

A. Metaphor

Example: These computers are old dinosaurs.

500

What is an expression, not a metaphor, that uses the words like, as, than, or resembles to compare two unlike things?

Simile.

Example: They fought like cats and dogs.

500

What is: She always bends over backwards to please her family.

A. Hyperbole

B. idiom

C. Simile

A. Hyperbole

500

What is: Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.

A. Imagery

B. Onomatopoeia

C. Alliteration

C. Alliteration