2. WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE?
Literal Language
Uses similes, metaphors,
hyperbole, and
personification to describe
something often through
comparison with something
different.
It means exactly what it
says.
Figurative Language
4. Idiom
(an expression that has a figurative
meaning unrelated to the literal
meaning of the phrase.)
“She drowned her sorrows in alcohol.”
Metaphor
(a figure of speech used in
comparison)
“He is the apple of her eye.”
Oxymoron
(two words having opposite
meanings are used together)
“She felt that it was time for this
bittersweet relationship to end.”
5. “Her eyes were like the
deep pools to her soul.”
“The old man waited for Death
to come to him.”
Simile
(compares two things)
Personification
(giving human characteristics to
a non-living thing)
Hyperbole
(exaggeration)
“You scared me to death.”
6. Here are some examples:
Literal Descriptions Figurative Descriptions
• Grass looks green.
• Sand feels rough.
• The flower smells
sweet.
• Grasshoppers make a
high pitched noise.
• The grass looks like spiky green
hair. (simile)
• Sand is solid water. (metaphor)
• The flower has the sweetest
smelling petals in the world.
(hyperbole)
• Grasshoppers are fiddlers who
play their legs. (personification)