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Figurative Language in To Kill a Mockingbird

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Figurative Language in To Kill a Mockingbird Simile, Metaphor, and Personification are considered Figurative Language literary devices because they help paint ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Figurative Language in To Kill a Mockingbird


1
Figurative Language in To Kill a Mockingbird
  • Simile, Metaphor, and Personification are
    considered Figurative Language literary devices
    because they help paint pictures (figures) in
    your mind as you read. Imagery, which uses your
    senses to paint pictures, is also figurative
    language.

2
Personification
  • A figure of speech in which an inanimate object
    or abstraction is endowed with human qualities or
    abilities.
  •  The act of personifying.

3
Personifying words
  • Mr. Radleys older son lived in Pensacola he
    came home at Christmas, and he was one of the few
    people we ever saw enter or leave the place. From
    the day Mr. Radley took Arthur home, people say
    the house died (Lee 14).

4
What are the personifying words?
  • The house was the same, droopy and sick, but as
    we stared down the street we thought we saw an
    inside shutter move. Flick. A tiny, almost
    invisible movement and the house was still (Lee
    19).

5
Personifying words?
  • There he was, returning to me. His white shirt
    bobbed over the back fence and slowly grew
    larger. He came up the back steps, latched the
    door behind him, and sat on his cot (Lee 55).

6
???
  • "At the door, we saw fire spewing from Miss
    Maudie's diningroom windows.  As if to confirm
    what we saw, the town siren wailed up the scale
    of a treble pitch and remained there, screaming."

7
Metaphor
  • A figure of speech in which a word or phrase that
    ordinarily designates one thing is used to
    designate another, thus making an implicit
    comparison.
  • In a sea of troubles, the amount of troubles is
    compared to a sea.
  • "All the world's a stage" (Shakespeare) compares
    the world to a stage.

8
Metaphor
  • Then I heard Atticus cough. I held my breath.
    Sometimes when we made a midnight pilgrimage to
    the bathroom we would find him reading (Lee 57).
  • Compares their trip to the bathroom with a
    pilgrimage.

9
What is the metaphor?
  • I had never thought about it, but summer was
    Dill by the fish pool smoking string, Dills eyes
    alive with complicated plans to make Boo Radley
    emerge summer was the swiftness with which Dill
    would reach up and kiss me when Jem was not
    looking(Lee 116).

10
What is the metaphor?
  • I knew when there was trouble in our street.
    Soft taffeta-like sounds and muffled scurrying
    sounds filled me with helpless dread (Lee 69).

11
Simile
  • A figure of speech in which two fundamentally
    unlike things are explicitly compared, usually in
    a phrase introduced by "like" or "as."

12
Simile
  • The Radley place fascinated Dill. In spite of
    our warnings it drew him as the moon draws
    water (Lee 8).
  • The moon draws water (an idiom!) means the moon
    attracts water (gravity).
  • Dill was intrigued by and attracted to the Radley
    place as though gravity was pulling him.

13
Whats the simile?
  • Ladies bathed before noon, after their
    three-oclock naps, and by nightfall were like
    soft teacakes with frostings of sweat and sweet
    talcum (Lee 6).

Whats being compared?
14
Whats the simile? Whats being compared?
  • It must have been two oclock. The moon was
    setting and the lattice-work shadows were fading
    into fuzzy nothingness. Jems white shirt-tail
    dipped and bobbed like a small ghost dancing away
    to escape the coming morning (Lee 57).

15
What type of literary device is used here?
  • Auntie said I should be a ray of sunshine in
    my fathers lonely life. I suggested that one
    could be a ray of sunshine in pants just as well,
    but Aunty said that one had to behave like a
    sunbeam, that I was born good but had grown
    progressively worse every year (Lee 81).

16
What did she use here?
  • "some tinfoil was sticking in a knot-hole just
    above my eye level, winking at me in the
    afternoon sun."

17
What did she use here?
  • the fruits of their industry (those that were
    not eaten) made the plot of ground around the
    cabin look like the playhouse of an insane
    child (Lee 170).

18
What did she use here?
  • The house was the same, droopy and sick, but as
    we stared down the street we thought we saw an
    inside shutter move. Flick. A tiny, almost
    invisible movement and the house was still (Lee
    15).

19
What did she use here?
  • the business part of the meeting was
    blood-curdling, the social hour was drearyShe
    said no more. When Miss Maudie was angry her
    brevity was icy. Something had made her deeply
    angry, and her gray eyes were as cold as her
    voice (Lee 233).

20
Create your own!
  • You will take five word cards from the box.
  • Once you have these, you can arrange and
    rearrange them in any order you want to.
  • You will fill in the words that go between the
    cards.
  • Create at least one metaphor, one simile and one
    example of personification. You may use all, or
    some of the words. The more you use, the more
    interesting it will be.
  • Write them down.

21
Example
Secret
Tiger
Frown
Thunder
Games
The tiger secretly frowned as the games
thundered on.
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