HSLanguageArts
Figurative Language
Imagery
Simile
Metaphor
Alliteration
Personification
Symbolism
Hyperbole
Onomatopoeia
Allusion
Oxymoron
Anaphora
Motif
Apostrophe
Synecdoche
Juxtaposition
Irony
Enjambment
Paradox
Anadiplosis .
Similar Posts
39 thoughts on “Figurative Language (with examples)”
Comments are closed.
Thank you so much for your video. btw I love ur accent. this actually helped me a lot.
This video was really great and a few of these I already new,but thanks to this video I learned more. I just wish you could have added assonance and consonance that would be great.Other than that this video was very Informational.
Thank you so much for this helpful video!
Thanks for the help
great video…….good crash course on figures of speech….
Thank you very much
thank you so much bro, i have an English tomorrow and this helped me alot
really useful and well explained! thank you!
thank u so much!!
"Clear as mud" is a METAPHOR"?
Absolutely faultless in every respect! Definitely the BEST English tutorial I have ever seen on the whole of You Tube!
awesome video but u are speaking too fast therefore i have to replay the video again and again
and symbolism is wrong symbolism occurs when a word which has meaning in itself but is used to represent something entirely different
clear as mud is simile and oxymoron?
Thank you, it looks like I'm going to pass my grammar test.
You are awesome thank you for this video I learned a lot in three minutes more than the teacher could teach me in two weeks.
Where's idiom
Personificati0n and Apostrophe can sometimes be c0nfusing.. C0uld u plz teach us the more exact 0r easy way to differentiate between the tw0.Thanks
what a wonderful video it is!
Thanks — I will use this video as a homework refresher for my students. 🙂
hi
So difficult
Than So much !
This is really useful thankyou so much??
Great video. Its hard to find videos that include the high school words. Thanks!
…that enjambment example/ point that out to me – please! Thanks – good video!
A very instructive video, many thanks
This is so liberating!
I did not know almost all of them
I'd like to know, in which i know i never heard yet. When they say native language, does it mean that the normal people use in daily life? I just encounter someone said that the native language does not possess any of above examples and plainly packs of words literally mean itself. I believe Americans use some of those colorful speech every day. Good video Man! I'll share these to anyone who needs it. (y) Thanks!
I really liked this video. However, I would like to point out that your explanation of metaphor is a little bit off, since a metaphor does not require a version of the verb "to be". Otherwise, really good presentation!
How can I practice these?
thanks it really helps me a lot bruh
Microsoft works, lol
Thx
really useful and well explained! thank you!
This is really useful thankyou so much?
win win win win noobs on fortnite thumbs down (not a noob thumbs up my dude)
really useful and well explained! thank you!