Figures of Speech
Figures of Speech
Figures of Speech
Figures of speech are the most common type of questions which are asked in CBSE or for that
matter any board examination. Since, poetry has so many things to learn about, it’s not at all
easy to mug up all the instances where we are asked these in the poems.
To make life simpler, I bring to you this small guide with the most commonly used figures of
speech. I assure you that 99% of what you see below is the only thing you need to know to
answer these 1 markers!
1. Simile
2. Metaphor
3. Personification
4. Apostrophe
5. Oxymoron
6. Irony
So let’s begin by explaining each one of them.
1. Simile
Simile is nothing but comparison between two very different objects. Though, you’ll need to have
at least one point in common between them.
Eg:
Let’s take up an example to clear the difference between a metaphor and a simile.
3. Personification
Eg:
…..trees sprinting
4. Apostrophe
Hey you little teddy bear, does she love me? Don’t take my wrong, this is what Apostrophe
actually is. It’s when an author or poet directs a speech towards an abstract object or an
imaginary person.
Eg:
6. Irony
This one is the most commonly used of all in our day-to-day conversations. Irony is a form where
the literal meaning is completely opposite to what is conveyed by the author or the poet.
Eg:
This is taken from Aunt Jennifer’s tigers and it brings forth a sense of irony because the tigers
are much stronger than the woman who created them.
I’ve tried getting examples from NCERT textbooks so that you can relate them while you’re going
through the poems.
Figures of Speech
“All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women are merely
players!”. One of the most memorable lines in the English language,
this sentence is a perfect example of figures of speech. They help
lend the prose a lyrical and fresh quality. Let us learn more about
figures of speech.
Figures of Speech
Language can be used in two ways – literally and figuratively. Literal
language is direct and uses the real definition and meanings
of words and phrases. But when we talk figuratively, the meaning of
any word/phrase will depend on the context in which they are used.
A figure of speech relies on such figurative language and rhetoric.
When using figures of speech the words will diverge from their literal
meanings, to give a more stylized and specialized meaning to these
words. Let us take for example the phrase”fast like lightning”. This
phrase merely implies great speed, it does not mean literally as fast as
lightning. Example: “On hearing the school bell the kids ran out of
the class as fast as lightning”.
(Source: flickr)
1] Simile
A simile is a figure of speech that uses comparison. In a simile, we
use two specific words “like” and “as” to compare two unlikely
things, that actually have nothing in common. This is done to bring
out the dramatic nature of the prose and invoke vivid images and
comparisons. It is one of the most common forms of a figure of
speech and is used in everything from day-to-day talk to poems.
3] Personification
Another very interesting figure of speech is personification. In this,
we personify or represent a non-human entity as human. We give an
inanimate object or an intangible idea of some human qualities such
as emotions, or gestures or even speech. this is done to portray
the object as alive and help the listener or reader paint a vivid picture.
Again, if we take the words at their literal meaning they will sound
absurd.
4] Hyperbole
Hyperbole in the Greek language translates to ‘excess’. And that is
what it does, it exaggerates. We use hyperboles to emphasize the
importance or overstate something. This exaggerates claims
and statements are never meant to be taken at their literal meaning.
They are used to create a strong and lasting impression
5] Onomatopeia
This is a figure of speech where words or phrases indicate sounds.
Often to bring about more imagery and better describe a setting,
authors use words to involve all five of our senses. Onomatopeia
refers to those words that imitate the sounds of an object or person.
a. Simile. The cat (and its speed) speed is compared to the wind.
And since the word ‘like’ is used, it is a simile
b. Onomatopeia. Barking is a word that indicates sound.
c. Metaphor. Here the two things are compared without the use
of ‘as’ or ‘like’. The sentence indicates that one of the things is
similar to the other.
CONTACT
Examples include:
Anaphora
Anaphora is a technique where several phrases or verses begin with the same word
or words.
Examples include:
Assonance
Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds (not just letters) in words that are close
together. The sounds don't have to be at the beginning of the word.
Examples include:
A - For the rare and radiant maiden whom the angels named Lenore.
(Poe)
E - Therefore, all seasons shall be sweet to thee. (Coleridge)
I - From what I've tasted of desire, I hold with those who favor fire.
(Frost)
O - Oh hear old Triton blow his wreathed horn. (Wordsworth)
U - Uncertain rustling of each purple curtain (Poe)
Euphemism
Euphemism is a mild, indirect, or vague term that often substitutes a harsh, blunt, or
offensive term.
Examples include:
Hyperbole
Examples include:
Irony
Irony occurs when there's a marked contrast between what is said and what is
meant, or between appearance and reality.
Examples include:
"How nice!" she said, when I told her I had to work all weekend.
(Verbal irony)
A traffic cop gets suspended for not paying his parking tickets.
(Situational irony)
The Titanic was said to be unsinkable but sank on its first voyage.
(Situational irony)
Naming a tiny Chihuahua Brutus. (Verbal irony)
When the audience knows the killer is hiding in a closet in a scary
movie, but the actors do not. (Dramatic irony)
Metaphor
Examples include:
Heart of stone
Time is money
The world is a stage
She's a night owl
He's an ogre
Onomatopoeia
Onomatopoeia is the term for a word that sounds like what it is describing.
Examples include:
Whoosh
Splat
Buzz
Click
Oink
Oxymoron
Peace force
Kosher ham
Jumbo shrimp
Sweet sorrow
Free market
Personification
Examples include:
Simile
A simile is a comparison between two unlike things using the words "like" or "as."
Examples include:
As slippery as an eel
Like peas in a pod
As blind as a bat
Eats like a pig
As wise as an owl
Synecdoche
Examples include:
Wheels - a car
The police - one policeman
Plastic - credit cards
Coke - any cola drink
Hired hands - workers
Understatement
Examples include:
SIMILE:
In Simile, a comparison is made between two object of different kinds which have at
least one point in common.
Examples:
• As active as quicksilver
• As afraid as a grasshopper
• As ageless as the sun
• As agile as a cat
• As agile as a monkey
• As alert as a bird
• As alike as two peas
• As alone as a leper
• As alone as Crusoe
• As ambitious as the devil
METAPHOR:
A Metaphor is an implied Simile. It does not, like a Simile, state that one thing is like
another or acts as another, but takes that for granted and proceeds as if two things were
one.
Thus when we say, ‘He fought as fiercely as a lion’, it is Simile.
Examples:
NOTE:
Every SIMILE can be compressed into a METAPHOR, and Every METAPHOR can be
expanded into a SIMILE.
Examples:
PERSONIFICATION:
In Personification, inanimate objects and abstract notions are spoken of as having life
and intelligence.
Examples:
APOSTROPHE:
Examples:
HYPERBOLE:
Examples:
• Why, man, if the river is dry, I am able to fill it with tears.
• Hmalet! You have not cleft my heart in twain.
EUPHEMISM:
Examples:
ANTITHESIS:
Examples:
OXYMORON:
Oxymoron is special type of Antithesis, whereby two contradictory qualities are predicted
at once of the same thing.
Examples:
Identify if the phrase is a simile (S), metaphor (M), personification (P), or Idiom (I).