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Characteristics of Poetry

This document discusses characteristics of poetry and figurative language used in poetry. It defines figurative language as words or phrases that exaggerate or alter the usual meanings of words. The document then lists and provides examples of 13 types of figurative language commonly found in poetry, including alliteration, assonance, onomatopoeia, imagery, metaphor, simile, personification, allusion, synecdoche, conceit, paradox, hyperbole, and symbolism. It concludes by thanking the audience.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
114 views13 pages

Characteristics of Poetry

This document discusses characteristics of poetry and figurative language used in poetry. It defines figurative language as words or phrases that exaggerate or alter the usual meanings of words. The document then lists and provides examples of 13 types of figurative language commonly found in poetry, including alliteration, assonance, onomatopoeia, imagery, metaphor, simile, personification, allusion, synecdoche, conceit, paradox, hyperbole, and symbolism. It concludes by thanking the audience.

Uploaded by

chekgualan
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CHARACTERISTICS OF POETRY

AND
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE IN
POETRY
NURUL AIN BT MOHD AZMI
NUR FARAHIYAH BT AB WAHAB
NUR HASNIZA BT SHALIM
NORUS SYAIRAH BT MOHD YUSOF
NUR SYAMIMI BT TUMIRAN
CHARACTERISTICS OF

POETRY
Compresses idea :
Poetry uses less
space than prose
does to tell about
idea
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE

IN POETRY
INTRODUCTION
• Figurative language refers to words, and groups of words,
that exaggerate or alter the usual meanings of the
component words.

• It usually gives us a feeling about its subject.


1. ALLITERATION:
 Repeated consonant sounds
 e.g. : "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled
peppers."
 
2. ASSONANCE:
 Repeated Vowel sounds
e.g. : "The June moon loomed over the horizon"
 
3. ONOMATOPOEIA:
 Words sound like what they are
 e.g. : "The fire crackled and the popcorn
popped.“
4. IMAGRY :
Creating pictures for the senses
e.g. : “ I was ten when they buried you.”
 
5. METAPHORS:
Compares two unlike things
e.g.: “The planting of seed in the garden, in springtime is
like making love”.
 
6. SIMILE:
 A comparison using "Like" or "as"
 e.g. : "She dances like a princess.“
 
 
7. PERSONIFICATION:
Speaking of something that is not human as if it had human
abilities and human reactions.
e.g. :  "The fog crept in on little cat feet."
 
8. ALLUSION:
 A cross reference to another work of art
 e.g. : "My boyfriend dances like King Kong."
 
9. SYNECDOCHE:
 Using part of an object to stand for the whole thing
 e.g. : "Have you got your wheels, man?"
 
10. CONCEIT:
 An extended metaphor that doesn't make sense at
first.
e.g. :  "My compass love for you is true.“

11. PARADOX:
 Something that at first seems to contradict itself
e.g. :  "A little learning is a dangerous thing.“

12. HYPERBOLE:
A great exaggeration used to emphasize a point, and is
used for expressive or comic effect.
 e.g. : "My date last night was the most beautiful girl in
the world."
13. SYMBOLISM:
Something represents a completely different
thing or idea.
e.g.: The snitches symbolize various prejudice in
people.
 
14. ANTITHESIS:
 Saying the opposite of what you really mean, for
effect
e.g. : "That was a cool move, man."
 
That’s all from us…
Thank you for listening…
…THANK YOU…

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