Rhetorical and Literary Devices

Edit Answers
HLJZUBGIVIGEZSZFPMGG OQRMHSZEDMUYNOISULLA XBWZYNOITACIFINOSREP QDTOPBXUYJBDNYHKMKWU JIFIEZBLXLHUAREQFBHN LBGFRHHCCECIOHCDROWR ENYSBGOPLVDHLQHKMBQM TIIYOIAMJRPLPRZSTFYS IWWMLVSGPALMIZWAOFKZ EBHBENOITARETILLAJHX LJBOGJPEINFZAOUWIYTL VPPLURMMYXISBWEIYTLH BKHZKGAZJOCTDFDJAJPJ OSMRLGBINOITITEPERKN LHLOEDWVYOHQEWZFVLJY KTWRFGLHVUDQVILPISNX SBYRZXCWEIENOTOEGORA MZKRNUSIMILEJXMNRQWP FDYZETLHZINSPMAIEENE JHYKCAOKAGAEGSCVVIIN
1.
Making something sound bigger or more extreme than it really is.
2.
uses *like* or *as* (*“Her smile is like sunshine”*) to compare two things
3.
saying the same word or phrase more than once to make it stand out
4.
an object or image that stands for something bigger (*a heart = love*).
5.
words start with the same sound (*“Peter Piper picked…”*).
6.
words that help you picture something in your mind using the senses.
7.
when what happens is the opposite of what you expect.
8.
giving human qualities to non-human things
9.
says one thing *is* another (*“Time is money”*) as a comparison
10.
how the speaker feels towards the subject
11.
a mention of something famous or culturally relevant (like a book, movie, or event).
12.
an author using specific diction that creates an effect