PPT-Alliteration, onomatopoeia, allusion

Author : min-jolicoeur | Published Date : 2015-11-27

Alliteration When a series of words in a row or close to a row have the same first consonant sound Carries cat clawed her couch Saras sister slept soundly

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Alliteration, onomatopoeia, allusion: Transcript


Alliteration When a series of words in a row or close to a row have the same first consonant sound Carries cat clawed her couch Saras sister slept soundly Hannahs home has heat. Critical reading: psychoanalytical, . marxist. , feminist. LQ: Can I compare poems . thematically while . analysing. language form and structure?. Literary terms: Juxtaposition, assonance, alliteration, onomatopoeia, internal rhyme, caesura, crescendo, bathos, pathos, satirical, misogyny. Sound Devices. . . A good poem can often be identified by its sound quality.. 1. How do we evaluate sound quality?. Poets use certain devices to create sound within a poem. We need to analyze the poem to look out for these devices, indicate the sound produced and evaluate its effect on the reader.. Connotations. 6. th. Grade . Ms. . . Lukacs. Greenwich’ Connecticut. Greenwich is a town on the suburb of Connecticut. The town is home to several hedge funds and it was ranked #1 place to live in money magazine. It was also ranked #1 in the “Biggest earner” catagory By money magazine!. Onomatopoeia . A word that imitates the sound it represents.. Bang!. Whack!. Zoom!. Moo. Onomatopoeia-The. . use of words whose sound makes you think of their meaning. .. Buzz. Zip. Slurp. Snip. Pop. A word which represents or imitates natural sounds.. . Words, such as plop, buzz, or snap, make sounds that suggest their meaning. Onomatopoeia provides sound effects and appears in poetry, advertising, and children’s stories.. “Poetry is when an emotion has found its thought and the thought has found words.” ~Robert Frost. Poetic. . Devices. The Sounds of Poetry. Onomatopoeia. When a word’s pronunciation imitates its sound.. (on-o-ma-to-pee-uh and . hy. -. perr. -. bo. -lee). Onomatopoeia is the use of sound words. These words sound like things they describe. . What is it?. “It . went . zip.  when it moved and . bop. BETTY BOTTER. Betty . Botter. bought some butter.. “But,” she said, “the butter’s bitter.. If I put it in my batter,. it will make my batter bitter.. But a bit of better butter—. that would make my batter better.”. What do you already know about figurative language?. Why do you think learning figurative language might be important?. Terms You Know:. Simile. Metaphor. Personification. Terms You Will Know:. Onomatopoeia. Allusion. A reference within a written work to something outside it:. Types of Allusions . in literature:. Historical (refer to a war/king). Biblical (events in the Bible). Classical (Greek/Roman lit.). Alliteration. personification. simile. assonance. onomatopoeia. allusion. hyperbole. Imagery. Alliteration:. . Repetition . of the . first. consonant. .  .                                                            . Name: __________________________ Date: ___________ PD: ______. Directions. : Match definitions in Column B to the type of figurative language it describes in Column A. . -COLUMN A-. _____1. idiom. _____2. metaphor. It does not describe in detail the person or thing to which it refers. It is just a passing comment and the writer expects the reader to possess enough knowledge to spot the allusion and grasp its importance in a text.. reference. . to a person, . place, thing. , or idea of . literary. , historical, . . cultural. , or . political significance. . . . . . It . does . not . describe in . detail. the . person .

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