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ELA 5: Figurative Language 2314 Views
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Description:
Lend us your eyes and ears, because today we're learning about figurative language. And don't worry, we'll totally give you your eyes and ears back after.
Transcript
- 00:04
[Coop and Dino singing]
- 00:13
In general, people tend to say, more or less, what they mean. [Men waiting at a restroom door]
- 00:17
Especially when they want something.
- 00:19
So if someone says they want a hammer, they probably want a hammer.
- 00:23
If they ask for a can of soda, it's safe to assume… you know, they'd like a can of soda. [Waiter approaches table with two girls]
Full Transcript
- 00:27
But if someone says they want a hand, they probably don't want you to give them a literal hand.
- 00:31
Not unless you’re working on a prop shop or building a haunted house.
- 00:35
Most of the time when a person says something that would be strange to treat literally,
- 00:39
we've entered into the realm of Figurative Language. Oo-oo-oo. [Girl enters figurative language realm]
- 00:44
Figurative language is the use of words that mean something other than their literal meanings. [Coop explaining figurative language]
- 00:49
There are all sorts of tools used in figurative language, including similes, metaphors, and idioms.
- 00:55
And, no, that last one is not an insult.
- 00:57
Call someone an idiom and you'll be the one who ends up sounding like a dummy. [People pointing to a dummy sat on a bench]
- 01:01
So consider the sentence: "America is a melting pot."
- 01:05
We don't mean that America is literally a cooking apparatus.
- 01:08
Even if it can feel that way in certain parts of the South.
- 01:11
Phew! It is hot!
- 01:12
Instead, we're using figurative language. The melting pot is a metaphor for the way [Melting pot cooking food and national flags appear]
- 01:16
in which so many people from so many different backgrounds mix together in America to create
- 01:20
one common culture.
- 01:22
Which is great, but not exactly helpful if you’re in the mood for fondue.
- 01:26
Here's another one: "This classroom is like a circus."
- 01:29
Unless you’re in clown college,
- 01:31
this sentence probably isn’t in reference to the tightrope in the middle of the classroom. [Boy balancing on a tightrope in class]
- 01:35
Again, it's a case of figurative language, a simile comparing a wild and chaotic classroom
- 01:40
to a different wild and chaotic thing, a circus.
- 01:43
Why is this one a simile when the last example was a metaphor?
- 01:47
Well because we may something is something else, even if we actually don't mean it literally, it's a metaphor.
- 01:53
When we use a comparing word like "like" or "as" it's a simile.
- 01:58
Okay. Finally, let's think about the sentence: "It's raining cats and dogs."
- 02:02
We wouldn't utter this this sentence in the incredibly rare instances of a downpour of household pets. [Woman standing outside and cats and dogs fall from the sky]
- 02:07
You guessed it: it's figurative language. "It's raining cats and dogs" is an idiom:
- 02:12
a group of words that have an established meaning. [Dino discussing idioms]
- 02:14
People use the phrase all the time and it's implication is common knowledge.
- 02:18
In this case, it just means a heavy rain. So no need to worry about Fluffy.
- 02:22
We can even use figurative language without really meaning to.
- 02:25
You've probably heard the expression "give me a hand" so often that
- 02:28
you automatically understand that it means asking for help rather than asking for five actual fingers. [Man on a ladder and girl appears holding a hand]
- 02:34
Which is a huge relief to fingers everywhere.
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