Figurative Language Fun Reading and Writing

by Digital, Language & Writing, Literature1 comment

Who likes figurative language? Everybody does! (That’s hyperbole.) The great thing about it is you can say something is something it’s not and get away with it (using a metaphor)! When you’re at a loss for words, just use “like” or “as” to try to explain what you mean (with a simile). You can make words out of sounds like a teacher’s favorite “shhhhhh” (that’s onomatopoeia). Plus, listen to just about any song and you’ll hear figurative language because that’s how awesome it is!

blog post featured image figurative language fun

1. Let’s Start By Defining Some Common Figurative Language Terms:

  • personification: attributing human traits and qualities to something not human, such as an animal. I don’t think Disney could exist without this!
  • simile: a comparison that uses “like” or “as” such as “I’m as hangry as a bear.”
  • metaphor:something is said to be something else or do something else in order to suggest a similarity between them. Like, “You are such an angel!”
  • idiom: a commonly used phrase that isn’t meant to be taken literally because then it would make no sense! For example, “He kicked the bucket” has nothing to do with kicking a bucket. These are troublesome when you’re learning a language.
  • hyperbole:The use of exaggeration for emphasis or to create a strong impression
  • onomatopoeia:The formation of a word by imitation of a sound made by an object, person, or animal like “woof, woof.”
  • repetition/parallelism:Quite simply, repetition is the repeating of a word or phrase. It is a common rhetorical device used to add emphasis and stress in writing and speech.
  • alliteration: the occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words. For example, the ice cream “Cocoa Mocha Macaroni”

2. Play Bingo Using Terms From This Comprehensive List: Holy smokes! This website defines a huge amount of figurative language and literary devices. I was thinking this could really help you if you want to make Literary Terms Bingo. For that you would make the bingo board with terms, and then instead of announcing the terms, you would announce the definitions. Sounds fun, right?

3. You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch: Ok, so I watched a LOT of videos online that attempted to teach figurative language, and I gotta say (sorry, but) they weren’t that great. I couldn’t recommend a single one. And then I got the idea to listen to the Christmas song about the Grinch and it’s perfect! You can have students watch the video and ask them to find similes, metaphors, and hyperbole. There are two similes right off the bat, and then metaphor galore, and also hyperbole such as “I wouldn’t touch you with a thirty-nine-and-a-half foot pole!” Here are the rest of the words:

 

You’re a mean one, Mr. Grinch

You really are a heel

You’re as cuddly as a cactus

You’re as charming as an eel

Mr. Grinch

You’re a bad banana

With a greasy black peel

You’re a monster, Mr. Grinch

Your heart’s an empty hole

Your brain is full of spiders

You’ve got garlic in your soul

Mr. Grinch

I wouldn’t touch you

With a thirty-nine-and-a-half foot pole

You’re a vile one, Mr. Grinch

You have termites in your smile

You have all the tender sweetness

Of a seasick crocodile

Mr. Grinch

Given the choice between the two of you

I’d take the seasick crocodile

You’re a foul one, Mr. Grinch

You’re a nasty, wasty skunk

Your heart is full of unwashed socks

Your soul is full of gunk

Mr. Grinch

The three words that best describe you

Are as follows and I quote, “Stink, stank, stunk”

You’re a rotter, Mr. Grinch

You’re the king of sinful sots

Your heart’s a dead tomato splotch

With moldy purple spots

Mr. Grinch

Your soul is an appalling dump heap

Overflowing with the most disgraceful assortment of deplorable

Rubbish imaginable

Mangled up in tangled up knots

You nauseate me, Mr. Grinch

With a nauseous super-naus

You’re a crooked jerky jockey

And you drive a crooked horse

Mr. Grinch

You’re a three-decker sauerkraut and toadstool sandwich

With arsenic sauce

SourceLyricFind/Songwriters: Albert Hague / Theodore S. Geisel/You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing
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4. Song Lyrics: Song lyrics are PERFECT for finding figurative language. Ask students to share some examples, and they will be right on it!! Ask them to bring in lyrics and have the figures of speech already labeled and ready to share. And you may want to tell them to only bring in appropriate ones. Here are Kenny Chesney’s lyrics I love that aren’t really appropriate to share with kids (hypocrite?) but I want to share with you: “One bottle of wine, two dixie cups, three a.m. I fell in love, for the first time in my life.” Oh my goodness, I got chills again writing that.

 

5. It Came From Planet Simile Drawing Fun: Have students draw this creature, the creature from planet Simile.

 

planet simile drawing activity

 

 

6. Jack London’s stories, novels, and articles: This guy, in the early 1900s really knew his way around figurative language. For example, there’s “The Call of the Wild,” “To Build a Fire,” “Stories of the North,” “The Story of an Eyewitness,” etc. Or how about use this FREE lesson I made and you don’t even need the book for it. I did all the hard work of finding examples of figurative language in “The Call of the Wild” and then made a worksheet for kids to label them.

 

cover call of the wild figurative language lesson

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7. Alliteration Fun: Have you heard of Jack Prelutsky’s poem “Bleezer’s Ice Cream”? I just found it today and it’s not only a funny list of ice cream flavors, but it is also full of alliteration. Check it out:I made these graphic organizers using clip art from Erin Bradley Designs and am including them in my FREE CREATIVE GRAPHIC ORGANIZERS PACK (different colors and cone combinations). I think they would be perfect for listing some alliteration examples.

 

8. FREE Figurative Language Frenzy WebquestI made this with distance learning in mind and some great short reading selections I know of that contain figurative language galore, such as “All Summer in a Day” and “There Will Come Soft Rains” by Ray Bradbury (which has the elusive, hard-to-find dramatic irony), Barack Obama’s 2008 acceptance speech which repeats “Yes we can,” Jack London’s article about the 1908 San Francisco Earthquake/Fire that appeared in Collier’s Magazine, and a modern-day article about the same event. You should get it for your students:

 

9. Which Simile Symbolizes Me?: Here’s ANOTHER FREE lesson I wrote, and this time it has to do with writing. It gets students to write similes about themselves and then do a related mandala art activity. It is available in Google Slides or PDF. You should check it out. You can see more samples done by kids of all ages in my blog post:

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10. Bragging and Boasting Using Similes and Hyperbole Writing ActivityIf you’re still reading, thank you for hanging in there! I give you yet again another FREE writing lesson that has always proven to motivate the most reluctant of writers and bring joy to the classroom (or home with Google Slides). It leads them step-by-step in writing about something they are okay at and making it sound like they are the best ever at it. You can see a sample in my blog post about it.

 

 

11. THREE MORE FREE READING LESSONS: These are for students to read There Will Come Soft Rains and “All Summer in a Day by Ray Bradbury which are both packed with figurative language(and there’s me using Theresa Hernandez’s designs again). AND I made a WebQuest Practice Test “Smart Homes in Utopia and Dystopia” that engages students in reading multiple fiction and nonfiction online authentic sources around an awesome theme:

 

                                   

 

 

WebQuest Practice Test #4 Smart Homes in Utopia and Dystopia GIF

Since teaching ELA for 10 years, I’ve been a contracted learning resource and assessment writer while running my store “Loving Language Arts.” I know how to align to standards like the back of my hand, yet I always aim to make resources high-interest to motivate reluctant readers and writers.

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