Literary Devices and Figurative Language
Interpret and classify figures of speech—simile, metaphor, personification, hyperbole—and analyze how they affect meaning and tone.
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Identifying Similes and Metaphors
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Identifying Similes and Metaphors — Grade 6 English
"When you finally spot the comparison, the sentence stops being mysterious and starts being brilliant."
Hook: A small mystery in everyday language
Imagine your classmate says, "My backpack is a black hole." Do they mean the backpack literally swallows planets? No. But that sentence tells you something fast and funny — it's doing a job that plain facts don't. That's where similes and metaphors step in: they help language paint instead of just state.
You've been working on finding key information in different text structures — compare/contrast, cause/effect, sequence — and organizing your notes by structure. Now we level up: spotting comparisons (similes and metaphors) helps you understand tone, mood, and deeper meaning — even in informational pieces where an author might sneak a metaphor into a paragraph to make an idea punchier.
What are similes and metaphors? Quick definitions
- Simile — a comparison using "like" or "as". It says A is like B.
- Metaphor — a direct comparison that says A is B. It treats one thing as if it actually were another.
Simple rule: Similes say "like/as." Metaphors say "is/are" (or imply identity) without using like/as.
Micro examples
- Simile: Her smile was like sunshine. (Uses like to compare.)
- Metaphor: Her smile was sunshine. (Directly states the comparison — stronger and quicker.)
Why this matters (and where you'll see them)
- In fiction: They create vivid images and deepen character or setting.
- In poetry: They're the main tools poets use to pack emotion into few words.
- In informational texts: Authors sometimes use metaphors to explain complex ideas (e.g., "The internet is a highway of information") or to set tone. Recognizing them helps you summarize better and find the author's main point.
Think back to comparing texts: knowing whether a writer uses metaphors can help you contrast how two authors present the same idea even if their facts are the same.
How to spot them — a detective checklist
- Look for keywords: like, as → simile. is, are, was, were or verbs of being used between two nouns → check for metaphor.
- Ask the comparison question: Is this sentence saying one thing is literally another? If yes, it's a metaphor (or hyperbole). If it says "like" or "as," it's a simile.
- Check for impossibility: If the sentence would be false if taken literally ("The book ate my homework"), it's figurative.
- Look at intent and tone: Is the writer trying to explain an idea or to create an emotion/image? That’s likely figurative language.
- Beware of idioms: Some phrases are fixed expressions ("break the ice") that function like metaphors but are cultural; still tag them as figurative.
Tricks, traps, and delicious examples
- Not every comparison uses like or as. Some metaphors use verbs or nouns that imply identity: The classroom was a zoo. That’s a metaphor.
- Some similes are subtle: He moved through the crowd like a shadow. (Simile → like)
- Mixed metaphor (don’t do this in your writing): He was a loose cannon who blew up the conversation like a volcano. (Two different images clash — awkward.)
Playful examples
- Simile: Her voice was as soft as a pillow. (Gentle, clear picture.)
- Metaphor: Her voice was a pillow. (More poetic — invites you to imagine comfort instantly.)
Classroom activity: "Find the Device" (builds on note-organizing skills)
- Take a short informational paragraph (2–3 sentences) about a science idea (e.g., photosynthesis). Circle every comparison you find.
- Label each as SIMILE or METAPHOR. Note whether it helps explain the concept or just decorates the text.
- Add a quick margin note under the text-structure heading (e.g., cause/effect) describing how the figurative language supports the structure. Example: "Metaphor ‘plant as factory’ explains cause/effect of sunlight → sugar production."
Why this connects to your previous work: you're using the same habit — identify structure and key info — but now you also notice how the writer packages ideas to make them clearer or more persuasive.
Short practice — label and rewrite
Label each sentence as SIMILE or METAPHOR. Then rewrite a simile as a metaphor, or a metaphor as a simile.
- "The moon was a silver coin in the sky."
- "He ran like the wind."
- "The classroom was an oven."
- "Her laugh sounded like bells."
Answers (keep reading only after trying):
1. METAPHOR -> The moon was like a silver coin in the sky.
2. SIMILE -> He was the wind as he ran. (metaphor attempt: He was wind.)
3. METAPHOR -> The classroom was as hot as an oven. (simile)
4. SIMILE -> Her laugh was bells. (metaphor)
Tips for writing your own similes and metaphors (because creating beats just identifying)
- Keep comparisons short and clear. Don’t mix images.
- Pick comparisons that connect to emotions or senses (sight, sound, touch).
- Use metaphors for impact — they’re punchier. Use similes when you want to soften the image.
- Avoid clichés ("busy as a bee"). Try something fresh and specific.
Example: instead of "He was as brave as a lion," try: "He wore bravery like a second jacket." (Shows rather than tells.)
Quick review and takeaways
- Simile = like/as. Clear sign: the word like or as.
- Metaphor = direct comparison. The sentence treats one thing as another to make meaning vivid.
- Recognizing these devices helps you: understand tone, summarize richer meaning, and compare how different authors present ideas (a natural next step after analyzing text structure).
"Once you can spot the comparison, you can start asking why the writer chose it. That's where reading becomes detective work and art at the same time."
One-minute challenge (use in class or at home)
Scan a page of your current textbook or a short article. Find one simile and one metaphor. Write a one-sentence note under each explaining whether it helps explain the idea (informational) or creates feeling (emotional). Stick those notes under the text-structure heading you’d use when organizing your notes.
Final pep talk
Figurative language is not extra fluff — it’s a tool writers use to make facts sing and ideas stick. You're already practicing the detective work of finding structure and key info. Now add the superpower of spotting comparisons, and your reading will get faster, smarter, and a lot more fun.
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