Terms (1)
Terms (2)
Examples
Examples 2
Examples 3
100

Comparing two objects using like or as.

Simile 

100

Comparing two objects without using like or as

Metaphor

100

The stale bread was as hard as a rock.

Simile 

100

Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.

Alliteration

100

Love conquers all

Cliche 

200

Using extreme exaggeration.

Hyperbole


200

Words that imitate the sounds they make

onomatopoeia 
200

The car lights blinked in the distance.

Personification 

200

Life is like an onion: You peel it off one layer at a time, and sometimes you weep.

Extended Metaphor AND simile 

200

Seriously Funny

Oxymoron 

300

Giving human qualities to an object or animal

Personification

300

Using a play on words.  (Someone attempting to be funny, but it usually is not.)

Pun

300

Boom, splat, buzz, kachoo!

Onomatopoeia

300

The boy's stomach was a bottomless pit.

Metaphor 

300

A soldier who wants to be declared insane to avoid combat is deemed not insane for that very reason and will therefore not be declared insane.

Paradox 
400

The repetition of a beginning consonant sound in words that are close together

Alliteration 

400

Word choice

Diction

400

It was so cold outside, I thought I would die.

Hyperbole

400

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times

Paradox 

400

An apple falls on Isaac Newtons head, he discovers gravity (A story really about scientific discovery occurring in common places)

Allegory 

500

The term for all of the devices a writer uses to give the reader a better description and understanding of what is happening in the story or poem. We are studying this RIGHT NOW!

Literary devices and figurative language

500

To refer to something or someone who is not present as if they were.

Apostrophe 

500

The early bird get the worm.

Euphemism 

500

Living dead

Oxymoron 

500

Go slow over the road

Assonance