Abhi Kasipuram
Mr. Blakeslee
Hour 4
Fall 2016
Figurative Language In “Sandkings”
Summary: An evil man named Kress is sold some unique pets that worship him and fight. He is warned to treat them well, but he does not, and by the end, wanted to kill him. Connotation: “The door was quite large, and dark, and it breathed”. This really implies that Kress was looking at a maw’s mouth and Kress thought it was a door.
Allusion: “Asgard was Baldur’s largest city and boasted the oldest and largest starport as well.” This implies to the story because, have you ever heard the city Asgard, it is a mythical city in Norse and it states that Kress was going to a place that was like Asgard.
Verbal Irony/Sarcasm: “Rakkis was indignant. ‘But what will I do with my worms?’/’ Put them in a basket of fruit and send them to
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Simile: “As he fled, he was filled with a deep sense of contentment that coated his fear like a layer of syrup.” Kress feared that they were a lot of white sandkings that were going to kill him, but when he threw lissandra down the stairs he wasn't the one who felt the contentment it was actually the sandkings.
Metaphor: “The fear was on him again, filling him.” Kress was anxious because the sandkings did not eat for two days, so he thought he was next.
Euphemism: “ I want you for a bit of pest control.” This implies to Lissandra point of view because she knew she is really scary and she thought he really meant to kill someone, not kill actual pests.
Personification: “The alcohol settled him, but it did not wash away the fear.” This implies that alcohol calm down his nerves.
Idom: “Lissandra was true to her word.” This means she was honest because she said she would show up to kill the pests.
Figurative Language can help improve a story because it helps you visualize the story and help engage the reader into the
Character can be determined just based on language, how one speaks, and/or uses words. The most common use of language in this autobiography is figurative language; Zora Neale uses figurative language to express herself and her mother. If one's words are expressed adequately then the reader can easily understand how her and her mother see things representing who they are. In Zora Neale Hurston’s autobiography, Dust Tracks on a Road, she uses mostly figurative language to express herself, to show how she feels and acts as a person.
During the 1830s, the Great Depression took over America’s brightness and joy, shattering the American spirit. Citizens searched for a light to help people get their lives back together. During this searching, they found Seabiscuit to bring them hope. Seabiscuit is a racing horse that received the right trainer and rider to make him a legend. Seabiscuit’s story is beautifully portrayed in Laura Hillenbrand’s book, Seabiscuit.
In the short story “The Most Dangerous Game,” the author, Richard Connell uses the wonders of figurative language to spice things up in many ways throughout the story. Almost every page had something lying within itself, hidden behind metaphors similes, personification, and the list goes on. Some examples of how Richard Connell uses figurative language were clearly displayed on page 62: “Didn’t you notice that the crew’s nerves were a bit jumpy today?” This page also began to reveal the main feeling/emotion of the story(eerie/suspicious) came to be-which was set off by the example I used above. In this scene, the author uses very descriptive words and/or adjectives in his choice(s) of figurative language when he writes, “There was no breeze.
The thing that can add the extra umpf to a story which could give that vivid imagery that could not so easily be described in words. In Raisin in the Sun figurative language was abundant towards act three where the revelation of the family begins to occur. Beneatha a main character of A Raisin in the Sun uses figurative language to describe how she feels about the situation she’s currently in. Beneatha spoke of her dream on how “Fix up
“An Occurrence at Owl Bridge Creek” takes place in the Southern United States during the American Civil War. One thing to remember about the Civil War is that most of the fighting took place on southern soil, and for the Union to succeed in winning the war, their forces had to conquer the South. Not only that, but due to the agriculture being so profitable in the South, few southerners saw a need for industrial development, which resulted in the need to destroy the blockades to prevent northern troops from advancing southward. Late in the Civil War, the Union and the Confederacy strived to dominate the rail lines in northern Alabama, with the Confederates frantically dismantling critical establishments to delay the northerners advance and fracture
“Words are pale shadows of forgotten names. As names have power, words have power.” -Patrick Rothfuss. Everyone in uses figurative language in someway, you could be writing a paper, yelling at your sister, or maybe just talking to yourself. But you use it in someway, shape, or form.
Similes and metaphors allow the reader to know exactly how Granny experienced the story. For instance, “Cornelia's voice staggered and numbed like a cart in a bad road”
As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner “She would tell me what I owed to my children and to Anse and to God. I gave Anse the children. I did not ask for them. I did not even ask him for what he could have given me: not-Anse. That was my duty to him, to not ask that, and that duty I fulfilled.
Concrete Details/Imagery Gallien starts to notice the settings around him while he is on his way to drop Alex off. “For the first few miles the stampede trail was well graded and led past cabins scattered among weedy stands of spruce and aspen. Beyond the last of the log shacks, however, the road rapidly deteriorated” (Kraukaur 2). This quote creates of visual of the quick change from rural civilization to deep and dense forest.
The dark figurative language: "faint with thirst", "darkness of the Earth", "threatened to swallow up the entire waiting room", are a few examples found within just the first chapter. Gundar-Goshen creates this sense of sadness mixed with a kind of anxiety and tension through this evocative figurative language, urgent diction, and a structure that often begins with interior monologue from an initially unknown source. (d) Setting: The story of Waking Lions takes place in Israel. Eitan lives with his family in Beersheba, a dusty, brown, filth-ridden town he was forced to relocate to after a professional dispute at his previous job in Tel Aviv.
The utilization of symbolism, diction and syntax all foreshadow the ending of the story and help the reader understand the meaning of
Figurative language helps boosts the creativity of the reader. Lohrey has used figurative language to help make a situation or experience more relatable and understandable. ANNA & LUKE’S CHANGE TO THE COUNTRY -Lohrey effectively uses a number of techniques to describe people’s
“The Scarlet Ibis” “It was in the clove of seasons, summer was dead but autumn had not yet been born, that ibis lit in the bleeding tree” (Hurst 350). James Hurts creates a depressing tone, or attitude, by using figurative language, symbolism, and imagery. This sad story is about a child who is born with a deficiency and expected to die however, lives. His brother soon realizes that Doodle is not like the other kids so he pushes him to be like the others, which actually hurts him more. Figurative Language helps show the gloomy tone throughout the story from the first paragraph onwards.
“And it was then, listening, that they would feel the trapdoor open, and they’d be falling into that emptiness where all the dreams used to be. They tried to hide it, though…” “an enormous white mountain he had been climbing all his life, and now he watched it come rushing down on him, all that disgrace” John’s mother was quoted saying “But sometimes I feel like his father made him feel-oh, made him feel-oh-maybe overweight” Anthony L. Carbo was quoted saying “He didn’t talk much. Even his wife, I don’t think she knew the first damn thing about…well, about any of it. That man just kept everything buried. Richard Thinbill, in a testimony stated, “We called him Sorcerer.
Henry shook. Uncontrollably. Feaces, not his own, smothered his fingers. Oh, how they stung, akin to a searing, agonising heat. Still, he resisted the fervent and desperate urge to free his hands and shake the offending liquid from them.