Table of Contents
1. Figurative Language (Tropes) Overview
In literary studies, figurative language is generally divided into two massive categories: Schemes (changes in word order or syntax) and Tropes.
π₯ Exam Focus: Defining Tropes
Tropes are figures of speech that involve a change in the usual meaning of words. They turn language away from literal meaning toward imaginative or symbolic significance. (π₯ Asked in Exam)
2. Comparisons: Metaphor, Simile & Analogy
The most foundational tropes involve showing how one thing is like another.
π₯ Match the List: Types of Comparison
| Device | Definition & Exam Focus | Classic Example |
|---|---|---|
| Metaphor | A figure of speech where a word is applied to an object/action it does not literally denote. It is an implicit comparison that does not use "like" or "as." (π₯ Asked in Exam) | "Hope is the thing with feathers..." β Emily Dickinson |
| Simile | An explicit comparison between two unlike things using connecting words such as "like," "as," or "than." (π₯ Asked in Exam) | "...ice, mast-high, came floating by, as green as emerald." β S.T. Coleridge |
| Analogy | A comparison showing similarity in several respects to clarify a complex idea. Unlike a metaphor (which equates), an analogy maintains the distinction between the two things to show logical parallel structures. | Comparing two separated lovers' souls to the stiff twin legs of a drawing compass. β John Donne |
3. Substitutions: Metonymy & Synecdoche
These two devices are frequently confused by students. Both involve substituting one word for another, but the relationship between the words is different.
Figure 1: The mechanical difference between Metonymy and Synecdoche.
- Metonymy (π₯ Asked in Exam): Referring to something by the name of something else that is closely connected with it.
- Synecdoche (π₯ Asked in Exam): A figure of speech in which a physical part represents the whole (or vice versa).
4. Addresses & Exaggerations: Apostrophe & Hyperbole
Apostrophe
Definition: A rhetorical figure in which a speaker directly addresses an absent person, an abstract idea, or an inanimate object as if it were present and capable of understanding. (π₯ Asked in Exam)
- John Keats, Ode on a Grecian Urn: βThou still unravishβd bride of quietness..." (π₯ Exam Note: This specific line presents the Apostrophe rhetorical figure, as he speaks directly to the inanimate clay urn).
- William Shakespeare, Julius Caesar: βO judgment! thou art fled to brutish beasts...β (Mark Antony speaking directly to the abstract concept of Judgment).
Hyperbole
Definition: Intentional, deliberate exaggeration for emphasis, comic effect, or dramatic intensity. It is not meant to be taken literally. (π₯ Asked in Exam)
- William Shakespeare, Macbeth: βWill all great Neptuneβs ocean wash this blood / Clean from my hand?β (Macbeth exaggerating to show the immense weight of his guilt).
5. Sensory Devices: Imagery & Synesthesia
Imagery
The use of vivid and descriptive language that appeals to the five senses (sight, sound, touch, taste, smell) to create mental pictures and evoke emotional responses.
- William Wordsworth: βA host of golden daffodils; / Beside the lake... Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.β (Visual and kinetic imagery).
Synesthesia
A literary device in which one sensory experience is described using terms from an entirely different sensory domain. It blends perceptions.
- Emily Dickinson: βWith blue, uncertain, stumbling buzzβ¦β (Describing an auditory soundβa buzzβusing a visual colorβblue).
- John Keats: βTasting of Flora and the country greenβ¦β (Blending taste with visual botany).
6. Advanced Tropes: Catachresis, Periphrasis & Allusion
- Catachresis: The use of a strained, paradoxical, or illogical metaphor combining incompatible terms to create shock or intensity. (e.g., Shakespeare: "I will speak daggers to her..." β speech cannot literally be a weapon).
- Periphrasis (π₯ Asked in Exam): A roundabout, circumlocutory, or indirect manner of writing or speaking. Using many words to express a simple idea, often for euphemism or ironic effect. (e.g., T.S. Eliot: "No! I am not Prince Hamlet, nor was meant to beβ¦").
- Allusion: A brief, implicit reference to a historical person, place, event, or literary work that enriches meaning by invoking a shared context. (e.g., T.S. Eliot starting The Waste Land with "April is the cruellest month," directly alluding to and subverting the opening of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales).