English language devices revision

Descripción

Flash cards with language devices, what each language device is and means and an example
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Alliteration Repetition of sounds or two or three words starting with the same letter to make a particular point, e.g. 'Peter Piper Picked a Peck of Pickled Peppers'
Imperative language Gives a direct command. It can end in a full stop or an exclamation mark, e.g. 'Go away!'
Rhetorical question A question that does not require an answer e.g. 'Do you think this is acceptable?'. It is used to make the reader think.
Synonyms Better word e.g. Safire instead of blue.
Similes A figure of speech that expresses a resemblance between things of different kinds (usually formed with like' or 'as'.
Metaphor A figure of speech in which an expression is used to compare one thing to another by saying it 'is' that other thing, e.g. 'The world is your oyster'.
Personification A figure of speech where an animal or object is decribed as having human characteristics, e.g. 'The snow ran quickly across the sky covering the land'.
Imagery Is used to describe an image with words.
Sensory imagery Is when you describe sounds, smells, what you can feel, see and what you touch.
Onomatopoeia A type of word that sounds like the thing it is describing e.g. Cow=Moo. Car crashes= Crash, Bang!
Jargon Technical language that relates to a specific topic or subject, making a text sound more professional, may include people who know the jargon whilst excluding those who do not. It may reflect the target audience, e.g. medical words like 'appendicitis'.
Irony Irony is saying one thing when the opposite is actually meant, can be used, much like a pun, to create humor. Ironic statements engage the reader e.g. 'A traffic cop gets his license suspended for unpaid parking tickets'.
Satire Typically political humour or gentle humour. Example in literature, 'What's the use you learning to do right, when it's troublesome to do right and isn't troublesome to do wrong, and the wages is just the same?'.
Sarcasm Used as a weapon. Sarcasm is an ironic remark that seems to be praising someone or something but is really taunting or cutting. Sarcasm can be used to hurt or offend or can be used for comic effect. E.g. 'whatever kind of look you were going for, you missed'.
Allusion Allusion is used to explain or clarify a complex problem. Note allusion works best if you keep it short and refer to something the reader is familiar with, e.g. famous people, history, literature, the bible.
Repition Repeating a word, phrase or line to emphasise a point or image, e.g. 'Water , Water, everywhere!'.
Expert opinion When you write a quote or something from an expert in the topic you writing about, e.g. ' Dr Mir from the institution of healthy living says...'
Pattern of three Can be three adjectives in a row, or three words together in a list to help emphasise the point of the text e.g. 'This is a great, adaptable and fun language device'.
Emotive language Is language used to stir up emotions. Non-emotive version: Another man in the bar was injured by the mans glass. Emotive version: An innocent by stander suffered facial injuries when thug launched his glass across the bar.
Factual language A fact or statistics to back up a point, e.g. 'A study by the university of Texas shows that 98% of the people who didn't were sun screen got burnt'.
Colloquial language A bit like slang, informal language.
Anecdote When you tell a story connected to the subject your talking about.
Oxymoron When two seemingly incompatible words are placed together to create an image.
Enjambment A line which the rhythm and thoughts are continued and completed in the next line. It also means moving over from one line to another without using a punctuation mark.
Persuasive language Is used to persuade the reader to do what you want them to do or agree with.
Contrasting pairs Contrasting pairs are words/ideas with opposite meaning that are antonyms. E.g. hot and cold, up and down, left and right, live and die.
Counter arguments A counter argument is a view point that opposes your main argument. Counterarguments are part of good persuasive writing and speaking strategy. They also set up the chance to refute the opposition and show why your view point is the right one to have.
Personal Pronouns Are words like, we, our, us. They are useful to make the reader feel connected and part of a group.
Adverbs Adverbs are verbs used to modify the meaning of a verb or describes a word. E.g. He quickly runs. ( Quickly is the adverb)
Active verbs Are verbs often ending in 'ing' they are used to help fasten the pace of writing and tell us what the subject of our clause or sentence is doing physically or mentally.
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