Mastering Literary Devices: Understanding Tone, Simile, Metaphor, and More
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Explore how authors use tone, simile, metaphor, personification, hyperbole, imagery, and symbols to craft powerful narratives. Uncover the nuances and impact of these literary devices in shaping storytelling.
Mastering Literary Devices: Understanding Tone, Simile, Metaphor, and More
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Presentation Transcript
Literary Devices 4/30/2012
Tone • Author’s attitude toward a subject • Positive: hopeful, enthusiastic, sympathetic, humorous • Negative: insulting, condescending, desperate, scornful • Neutral: reflective, sincere, shocking, inquisitive
Simile • Comparing two things using “like” or “as” • Ex: “Janie saw her life like a great tree in leaf with the things suffered…”
Metaphor • Comparing two things • Ex: “Put me down easy, Janie. I’m a cracked plate.” • Ex: Her love bloomed with the changing of the seasons.
Personification • Giving human-like qualities to non-human objects • Ex: “…the panting breath of the breeze…”
Hyperbole • Extreme exaggeration • Ex: I’m starving to death.
Imagery • Descriptive language appealing to the five senses (sight, sound, taste, touch, smell) • Ex: “The porch was boiling now.” • Ex: “She was a wind on the ocean.”
Symbols • When something represents an idea or person • Ex: A red cross represents medical aid.