To Kill A Mockingbird Language Analysis
In Harper Lee's book To Kill A Mockingbird, Maycomb is portrayed as a character rather than a town. Lee does this by frequently using different language techniques. Maycomb is described by Lee as being old and boring with personification when Scout states: "it was a tired old town." Maycomb is also exaggerated to be so boring that "a day was 24 hours long but seemed longer." Both of these two techniques help to create an impression that if Maycomb was a character, it wouldn't be either vibrant or fun. Not only the town is perceived as old and boring but is also unpleasant.
Lee uses similes to compared Maycomb temperature than "a black dog suffered on a summer's day..." or "ladies bathed before noon...were like soft teacakes with frostings