Similes/Metaphors
Allusion/Onomatopoeia
Personification/Hyperbole
?MYSTERY?
Symbolism/Imagery
100

 Rewrite this comparison as a simile: "He ran faster than a cheetah."

 "He ran like a cheetah."

100

Define allusion

A reference to a well-known person, place, event, or work of literature.

100

Define personification

Giving non human things human qualities

100

 In a novel, a broken clock that never runs again appears whenever characters feel stuck in the past. Explain briefly what the broken clock symbolizes.

The broken clock symbolizes being stuck in time or an inability to move on from the past.

100

Give an example of how color can be a symbol

red-love

blue-sadness

yellow-happiness

200

 Which two things are being compared in the simile: "The night was as black as a velvet curtain"?

Night and a velvet curtain.

200

"She opened the door and it felt like Pandora's box." What does the allusion suggest?

) Pandora's box — suggests releasing trouble or unexpected problems

200

Define hyperbole

An extreme exaggeration

200

 Define: What is alliteration? Provide a short definition and a simple example of two words that use alliteration.

 Alliteration is the repetition of initial consonant sounds in neighboring words. Example: "bright blue."

200

 Define imagery in one sentence.

Words that appeal to the 5 senses

300

Define metaphor

A comparison between 2 unrelated things by saying one thing is the other (no "
like" or "as")

300

 Give two examples of onomatopoeia you might find in a story about a thunderstorm.

"boom," "crack," "rumble," "patter"

300

 Using hyperbole to show how hungry someone is.

I am starving

300

"The soft white sand warmed my feet as I stroll home after a sunny day at the beach" is an example of which literary device?

Imagery

300
  1. 200 — Multiple choice: A dove in a poem commonly symbolizes: A) danger
    B) peace
    C) confusion
    D) wealth

B

400

 Create a metaphor that describes a school as a place of growth

"The school is a greenhouse, nurturing young minds."

400

 Identify the onomatopoeia in this sentence: "The bacon sizzled in the pan." What feeling or image does it create?  

"Sizzled" — suggests hot, popping sound and makes food seem appealing/active.

400

Rewrite this sentence to include personification: "The old house stood on the hill."

"The old house yawned on the hill, its windows staring into the night."

400

This literary device repeats the same word or group of words at the start of successive clauses or sentences to create emphasis or rhythm. Name the device.

repetition

400

 Read the line: "His hands smelled of engine oil and the porch boards creaked underfoot." Which images (at least two senses) does the author use to help the reader imagine the scene?

 Images: smell (engine oil) and sound/touch (porch boards creaking); these evoke a gritty, worn setting.

500
  1.  Create an original simile that shows someone is feeling nervous

"Her hands trembled like leaves in a storm."

500

 Provide an example sentence that alludes to Greek mythology (not using the same examples above), and explain the intended meaning.

"He faced his own Achilles' heel when the test began." — Achilles' heel = weakness.

500

Identify the personification in this sentence: "The moon watched over the sleeping town."

The moon is given the human action "watched."

The town is given the human action of sleeping.

500

 A story or poem where characters and events symbolize deeper, often hidden, moral, political,  meanings, working on both a literal and a figurative level to teach a lesson or comment on reality.

allegory

500

 Create: Write one vivid sensory sentence (use at least two senses) that describes a rainy school morning.

 "Rain slapped the windows, the school bell dripped like a slow heartbeat, and wet backpacks left muddy prints on the tile."