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AP English Language: Identifying Figures Of Speech 10 Views


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Description:

Lines 65–67 ("In the purely…motor oil") contain examples of


Transcript

00:05

Okay A couple of lines for you here sixty five

00:07

to sixty seven contain examples of what So let's go

00:15

mumble in a purely feminine aquifers of sorority life one

00:19

of her biographers wrote The eternally tomboys leave flowed like

00:22

a drop of motor oil So there's a great example

00:24

of metaphor instantly poor little harper lee floating around like

00:27

an isolated oil bubble in the water climbing trees and

00:30

smashing baseball's while her sorority sisters painted their toenails pink

00:34

and you know had tea parties with pinky up Use

00:36

of imagery like that in a comparison is a metaphor

00:39

when the writer says x is why and a simile

00:41

when the writer says is like why Well an illusion

00:44

in a reference to some outside book song story or

00:47

whatever else and cynic dicky is when a part of

00:50

something is used to represent the whole like calling a

00:52

car wheels or calling a whole portion of an orchestra

00:55

Strings eh Repetition is well repetition Muthana me literally means

01:01

substitute name like when a statement from the president has

01:04

called a statement from the white house all right to

01:06

get rid of the understatement like repetition is just what

01:09

it sounds like Understanding something in order to make a

01:11

point And ana ma tapia's award for a sound that

01:15

sounds like the sound like boo hiss bang out and

01:18

finally parallel syntax is one Multiple sentences or clauses are

01:21

structure the same way and dennett tae shin or d

01:24

notation is the opposite of a lot of these other

01:26

terms and that it means using a word in its

01:28

strictest literal sense like he would have you do to 00:01:31.824 --> [endTime] the right answer here it's eats metaphor and simile

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