Sentences with phrase «find figurative language»

Because the visual aesthetic is beautiful and the text examples are vivid, students will find figurative language easy to understand and remember.

Not exact matches

Examples of various types of sound devices and figurative language found in the poems, such as alliteration, simile, metaphor, personification, onomatopoeia, and imagery.
When students practice using figurative language (metaphor, simile, personification, hyperbole, and symbolism), have them use Find and Replace to highlight a key word that's part of the figurative language, for feedback and reflection.
For a lesson plan designed to help teach students improve their reading comprehension, for example, you might state that at the end of the lesson, students should be able to read and understand figurative language, plot, climax, and other fiction characteristics, as well as the elements of nonfiction, and display the ability to find specific information in the text.
This literary lesson has students delving into Emily Dickinson's «The Moon was but a Chin of Gold» to find different types of figurative language.
The early works demonstrate Oiticica's efforts to find his own expressive language by integrating the playfulness of Klee's figurative dreamscapes and the strict geometricity of Malevich and Mondrian.
Gerhard Richter's unrelenting urge to find new painterly languages moved him away from the figurative and towards an embrace of abstraction.
The early Pictographs were created with a defined grid structure in order to organize theimages, often figurative and fragmented, in a utilitarian manner.Around 1948, Gottlieb began deconstructing the grid in an effort to find an alternative way to balance nature's interrelated forces: order and chaos.The earliest work on view, Inscription to a Friend, 1948, is an example of Gottlieb's initial attempts to integrate abstract forms that could still be relatable to a larger universal language, without the help ofthe grid.Inscription, 1954, demonstrates Gottlieb's further progression into purely abstract imagery using an evocative and highly developed lexicon.
These themes finds expression in Schomaker's own visual language, which is characterised by the tension between figurative representation and painterly abstraction.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z