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Question
figurative language review
as a great writer, richard wagamese uses a lot of figurative language in his novels. lets review our knowledge of figurative language and apply it to \the language of fishermen\.
imagery - words that paint pictures in your mind
alliteration - the same letter or sound at the beginning of closely connected words
symbolism - something that represents something else
hyperbole - exaggerated statements
onomatopoeia - words that sound like what they are
simile - a comparison between two unlike things using like or as
quotations\twhich figurative language device(s) do you see in each quotation? (hint: some have more than one!)
\i could feel the whale - like pressure of the fish at the other end.\
\hed scratch at the soles of my feet with a wooden spoon and hush me to silence with a finger to the lips.\
\wed drive out of kenora, ontario, on the gravel road that ran north out of town and hed slip me a cup of coffee and warm perogies wrapped in a napkin. wed watch the land roll by...\
\he was a mechanic, a tall, slender, chain - smoking grease monkey who smelled of oil, tobacco and old spice aftershave.\
\for me, at six, fishing was as close as i could get to my roots. joe made sure i got it. he got me to the land because he knew that there the land as close as my spirit could renew and reclaim itself. he knew that who i was, who i was born to be, was directly connected to the land and its mystery.\
- "I could feel the whale - like pressure of the fish at the other end." uses simile as it compares the pressure of the fish to that of a whale using "like".
- "He’d scratch at the soles of my feet with a wooden spoon and hush me to silence with a finger to the lips." has no obvious figurative language devices.
- "We’d drive out of Kenora, Ontario, on the gravel road that ran north out of town and he’d slip me a cup of coffee and warm perogies wrapped in a napkin. We’d watch the land roll by..." has no obvious figurative language devices.
- "He was a mechanic, a tall, slender, chain - smoking grease monkey who smelled of oil, tobacco and Old Spice aftershave." uses symbolism as "grease monkey" is a symbol for a mechanic.
- "For me, at six, fishing was as close as I could get to my roots. Joe made sure I got it. He got me to the land because he knew that there the spirit could renew and reclaim itself. He knew that who I was, who I was born to be, was directly connected to the land and its mystery." has no obvious figurative language devices.
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- Simile
- None
- None
- Symbolism
- None