In Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Robert Louis Stevenson uses figurative language to describe the people, places, and events in the story. This lesson examines examples of metaphor, onomatopoeia, personification, pun, and simile from the story.
While this one might look unfamiliar, you know what it is. Everyone is familiar with at least a few examples of onomatopoeia. It occurs when the name of a word describes a sound, with the word itself sounding similar to the actual sound.
crack the case game examples of onomatopoeia
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As illustrated in the following list, you can change any text in more or less subtle ways at a number of different levels including phonemes, words, grammar, and meaning. Because of this, the game can be profitably and enjoyable revisited again and again throughout the year. Even so, in initial plays of the game, it is important that the changes result in violations of the sense, meaning, and wording of the text that are relatively obvious. Following are some examples of the "nonsense" that can be created within familiar poems and rhymes: 2ff7e9595c
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