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Figures of Speech : English Literature NET,SET,PHD Exam

 

Types of Figures of Speech 


1. Simile

Comparison using like or as.
Ex: Her smile is like the sunshine.


2. Metaphor

Direct comparison without like/as.
Ex: Time is a thief.


3. Personification

Giving human qualities to non-human things.
Ex: The wind whispered in the trees.


4. Hyperbole

An extreme exaggeration.
Ex: I’ve told you a million times.


5. Alliteration

Repetition of initial consonant sounds.
Ex: She sells sea shells.


6. Assonance

Repetition of vowel sounds.
Ex: The eagle eats early.


7. Onomatopoeia

Words that imitate sounds.
Ex: The bees buzzed.


8. Oxymoron

Two opposite words together.
Ex: Sweet sorrow.


9. Paradox

A statement that seems false but is true.
Ex: Less is more.


10. Irony

Saying the opposite of what you mean.
Ex: A pilot afraid of heights.


11. Metonymy

One word stands for something related.
Ex: The crown made a new law.


12. Synecdoche

Part represents whole or whole for part.
Ex: All hands on deck.


13. Apostrophe

Addressing someone absent or non-living.
Ex: O Death, where is thy sting?


14. Euphemism

A polite way of saying something harsh.
Ex: He passed away.


15. Litotes

Using negative to express a positive.
Ex: She is not unhappy.


16. Pun

A wordplay with double meaning.
Ex: A boiled egg is hard to beat.


17. Antithesis

Two opposite ideas together.
Ex: Speech is silver, silence is golden.


18. Anaphora

Repetition at the beginning of sentences.
Ex: Every day, every night, every moment…


19. Epistrophe

Repetition at the end of sentences.
Ex: See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil.


20. Chiasmus

Reversal of structure (A-B, B-A).
Ex: Never let a fool kiss you nor a kiss fool you.


21. Climax

Ideas in increasing order.
Ex: He whispered, spoke, and shouted.


22. Anti-climax

Ideas in descending order.
Ex: He lost his family, his job, and his pen.


23. Zeugma

One word used for two different meanings.
Ex: She broke his car and his heart.


24. Tautology

Unnecessary repetition of words.
Ex: It is a free gift.


25. Allusion

An indirect reference.
Ex: He is a real Romeo.


26. Allegory

A story with a hidden meaning.
Ex: Animal Farm is an allegory of the Russian Revolution.


27. Imagery

Words that create sensory pictures.
Ex: The golden sun warmed the earth.


28. Symbolism

A symbol represents a deeper idea.
Ex: A dove symbolizes peace.


29. Analogy

A comparison that explains something.
Ex: Life is like a box of chocolates.


30. Understatement

Making something seem smaller than it is.
Ex: It’s just a scratch (when it’s deep).


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