This poem consists of many factors which give the poem its own unique idea such as the mood or feeling the reader gets while reading, the tone or the author’s attitude towards the poem, and the diction or the choice of words the author chose. Diction plays a major role in every poem or story especially this one. Many of these factors contribute to diction greatly, which affects this poem in general.…
Which had a negative impact on the speaker or a third person (loc. cit.: 287–288)…
The word choice, sentence structure, figurative language, and sentence arrangement the author {Kimberly Brubaker Bradley} uses, makes the text journalistic or informal like. When the characters talk, they don't speak formally or with really bad grammar. They talk like normal people would do. Kimberly writes with little figurative language. When she does though, it is relatable to the text, and easy for younger readers to understand.…
How does the author use figurative language to establish a tone of wonder in the first two paragraphs of the essay? Provide specific examples and explain how they provide the reader with a unique sense of the desert? Read line 26-49. How does this passage help develop a central idea of Kingsolver’s essay?…
I walked outside and it was hot vs. I took a leap outside into the sun that blazed down on me it felt like I was wearing millions of winter coats. Which one help you visualize which is happening better? The book I'm reading which is "Uglies" by Scott Westerfeld used a lot of figurative language throughout this story. For an example on page 238 it states, "it just felt flat, like a song she'd heard to many time." By using a simile it helped me understand what she meant by flat. If that simile wasn't there I could of though it meant deflated or flat like a pancake. To add on, using figurative language makes the book more clear and it allows the book to continue with a flow. As you can see, the book I chose to read "Uglies" contains figurative…
Have you ever visited a different country and felt like a complete alien? Well, how would you feel if you were to move there, forever? The novel, Home of the Brave, by Katherine Applegate is the story of how a young refugee from war-torn Sudan learns to adjust to a new life in America with the help of friends and family. Katherine Applegate’s use of figurative language, first person point of view, and free verse poetry is the most effective way to reveal the story of a refugee adapting to life in America.…
(1) Copy a passage that you find particularly beautiful or powerful. What devices (imagery, figurative language, etc.) did the author use to make an impact on the reader?…
The short story, “the Scarlet Ibis” is about two brothers who overcome adversity. One of the brothers name is Doodle and is invalid. The other brother, the narrator, is determined to increase Doodle’s mobility. Doodle was not able to walk and his older brother showed persistence to teach Doodle the walk. The author, James Hurst, uses diction and figurative language to show that Doodle has flaws, is optimistic, and is encouraged in a time of sorrow and disbelief because of his disability.…
I elicited and built on student responses in the video clips by asking students open-ended and follow-up questions that help them promote thinking and develop their abilities to construct meaning from, interpret, and respond to a complex text. In Video Clip 1, at 00:36, my question, “What are you noticing about the structure of the poem?” was answered correctly by a student so I restated his response in my own words to make sure that everyone heard the answer. At 00:44, another student answered the question correctly so I once again restated and elaborated on her response by responding, “Yes. The poem is organized in a chronological order. Does everyone see that? It begins with the flashback to his childhood and ends with the present. At 10:15, I elaborated a student’s response by saying, “Great. Each stanza discusses the three different places where the speaker buried his father. Right? He describes spiritual, physical, and emotional aspects of death in the three stanzas respectively.” If a student gives an incorrect or partially correct answer, I point out what is incorrect or partially correct about the answer, but ask the student a follow-up question that will lead that student and the class to the correct or stronger answer.…
The poet uses imagery and word choice in stanzas three and four in order to show a change of tone in the poem and the woman's attitude.…
In both poems, “On Monsieur’s Departure” and “The Lovesong of J. Alfred Prufrock,” they reveal very similar aspects in the human condition using figurative language. The use of figurative language in these poems makes it easier to portray the types of feelings that go through one's head. In “The Lovesong of J. Alfred Prufrock” the poem is talking about what seems to be more of what happens when one over thinks when he’s alone. Whereas in “On Monsieur’s Departure” the poem talks about what someone might feel when dealing with the heartbreak of unrequited love. Both poems touch on sensitive topics that involve the Human Condition that many people have dealt with in the past, today, and will in the future.…
I have noticed that the author likes to use a lot of figurative language when it comes to describing what the world has become. He is using personification to show how the world is slowing dying. Although the world isn’t really burning alive it is slowing becoming a world where there is nothing left to live, or look forward to anymore. It is very sad for all the characters to have to be living (or just keep surviving lucky) in this new world because they is absolutely nothing for them to do no more except for a believing that the aliens would hopefully leave soon. (106 words)…
Michel-Guillaume Jean de Crevecoeur, author of What is an American, effectively uses figurative language to emphasize the contrasts between an American life from his European life. He uses various similes and metaphors in order to help the reader understand what an American truly is. On lines 19 through 23, the author uses a simile to compare the European life to “useless plants” that are mowed down by “want, hunger, and war.” He later suggests that by transplanting these plants and giving them “vegetative mold and refreshing showers,” it will help them to “flourish.” Crevecoeur uses the words “withered” and “mowed down” with a negative connotation emphasizing the negativity of the European life.…
It seems as though everything in nature exists in a balanced state of equilibrium. It is evident that there is an opposing positive and negative relationship to everything in the world; day and night, good and evil, black and white; which leads some to enquire if one portion could exist without the other. This very notion is explored in William Blake’s “The Tyger”, where he develops this idea through language, imagery and poetic devices and through the poem’s exploration of the inseparable forces of good and evil. This poem breathes true of human nature through its use of contrasting agents where the author uses bright imagery and conflicting constants to compare the likes and differences that define our world.…
1. Pharaoh Ozymandias was a cruel and selfish man. Line 5 “And wrinklrd lip and sneer of cold…