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Figures of Speech

In this lesson we will look at four common types of figure of speech:
    Simile
    Metaphor
    Hyperbole
    Oxymoron
Figures of Speech

1. Alliteration

Repetition of an initial consonant sound.

2. Anaphora

Repetition of the same word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses or verses.

3. Antithesis

The juxtaposition of contrasting ideas in balanced phrases.

4. Apostrophe

Breaking off discourse to address some absent person or thing, some abstract quality, an inanimate object, or a nonexistent character.

5. Assonance

Identity or similarity in sound between internal vowels in neighboring words.

6. Chiasmus

A verbal pattern in which the second half of an expression is balanced against the first but with the parts reversed.

7. Euphemism

The substitution of an inoffensive term for one considered offensively explicit.

8. Hyperbole

An extravagant statement; the use of exaggerated terms for the purpose of emphasis or heightened effect.

9. Irony

The use of words to convey the opposite of their literal meaning. A statement or situation where the meaning is contradicted by the appearance or presentation of the idea.

10. Litotes

A figure of speech consisting of an understatement in which an affirmative is expressed by negating its opposite.

11. Metaphor

An implied comparison between two unlike things that actually have something important in common.

12. Metonymy

A figure of speech in which one word or phrase is substituted for another with which it is closely associated; also, the rhetorical strategy of describing something indirectly by referring to things around it.

13. Onomatopoeia

The formation or use of words that imitate the sounds associated with the objects or actions they refer to.

14. Oxymoron

A figure of speech in which incongruous or contradictory terms appear side by side.

15. Paradox

A statement that appears to contradict itself.

16. Personification

A figure of speech in which an inanimate object or abstraction is endowed with human qualities or abilities.

17. Pun

A play on words, sometimes on different senses of the same word and sometimes on the similar sense or sound of different words.

18. Simile

A stated comparison (usually formed with "like" or "as") between two fundamentally dissimilar things that have certain qualities in common.

19. Synechdoche

A figure of speech is which a part is used to represent the whole, the whole for a part, the specific for the general, the general for the specific, or the material for the thing made from it.

20. Understatement

A figure of speech in which a writer or a speaker deliberately makes a situation seem less important or serious than it is.

http://www.angelfire.com/ct2/evenski/poetry/figuresofspeech.html

http://www.englishclub.com/vocabulary/figures.htm

http://grammar.about.com/od/rhetoricstyle/a/20figures.htm