Figure of speech

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Metonymy is a figure of speech where a word or phrase is substituted with another word closely associated. For example, “the White House” refers to the U.S. President, and “Hollywood” can be used to discuss the U.S. film industry. It’s a way of replacing an actual name or word with a related concept, simplifying communication, and adding flavor to language by drawing on these associations.    Here are a few more examples! London Underground Train, Indie Filmmaking, Film Theory, Independent Filmmaking, Blue Pill, Writing Dialogue, The White House, Film Industry, Screenwriting

Metonymy is a figure of speech where a word or phrase is substituted with another word closely associated. For example, “the White House” refers to the U.S. President, and “Hollywood” can be used to discuss the U.S. film industry. It’s a way of replacing an actual name or word with a related concept, simplifying communication, and adding flavor to language by drawing on these associations. Here are a few more examples!

Is there a difference between a simile and a metaphor? Yes, there is.

What is a simile? It is a figure of speech that expresses similarity. It uses the as-adjective-as comparative form or with like.

What is a metaphor? It uses the verb to be and says someone or something is something.

There are many examples in this article to help you understand these two figures of speech. Fiction Writing, Self Publishing, What Is A Metaphor, Simile Vs Metaphor, Simile And Metaphor, Figures Of Speech, Verb To Be, Similes And Metaphors, The Verb

Is there a difference between a simile and a metaphor? Yes, there is. What is a simile? It is a figure of speech that expresses similarity. It uses the as-adjective-as comparative form or with like. What is a metaphor? It uses the verb to be and says someone or something is something. There are many examples in this article to help you understand these two figures of speech.

This is a differentiated figurative language product written for Carl Hiaasen’s novel, Flush. This novel is bursting with figurative language that offers excellent teaching opportunities helping students appreciate literature, become avid readers and skillful, competent writers.

This Product Includes:

245 Pages
Teacher’s notes
Study guide
Cut out study sheets/game
One practice quiz with 23 questions
8 Practice work sheets with ten questions each
18 Tests and quizzes with figurative language quoted from the novel
405 Questions based on quotes from the novel
258 Figures of speech from the novel
508 Questions total
Detailed answer keys
9 Easel Assessments – 3 practice and 6 with quotes from the novel
16 Easel Activities 6th Grade Ela, Allusion Examples, Situational Irony, Carl Hiaasen, Study Sheets, Figures Of Speech, Homework Sheet, Inclusion Classroom, Language Quotes

Dear Educators, This is a differentiated figurative language product written for Carl Hiaasen’s novel, Flush. This novel is bursting with figurative language that offers excellent teaching opportunities helping students appreciate literature, become avid readers and skillful, competent writers. This Product Includes: 245 Pages Teacher’s notes Study guide Cut out study sheets/game One practice quiz with 23 questions 8 Practice work sheets with ten questions each 18 Tests and quizzes with…

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