Analysing language
Language features
When analysing language you must show that you are aware of how it is written. This means identifying the language features used, and explaining their effect.
The following are some language features you may notice while reading.
Alliteration
This is where consecutive words begin with the same letter and, more importantly, the same sound.
An example is The rifles rapid rattle
. The repetition of the 'r' sound echoes the sound of machine guns being fired.
Allusion
An allusion is an indirect reference to a person, place, historical event or another literary work.
For example, if you call someone who helps others a Good Samiritan
you are alluding to the Parable of the Good Samaritan from the Bible.
Hyperbole
Hyperbole is the deliberate use of exaggeration to emphasise a point.
For example I'm giving it two hundred per cent
obviously isn't possible but the fact that it is impossible emphasises how much effort someone is willing to make.
Onomatopoeia
This is where a word makes the sound of the thing it describes.
An example is The ringmaster cracked his whip
. This implies the whip making a sharp sound.
Another example is Stuttering rifles rapid rattle
. The stuttering imitates the action of a machine-gun being fired.
Simile
A simile is a comparison where one thing is described as something else, using 'like' or 'as'.
An example is He looked as inconspicuous as a tarantula on a cake
. This really means he looked obvious and noticeable, he stood out, could not be missed.
Another example is She was like a snowflake
. This implies she was light, delicate, pure, insubstantial, fragile.
Metaphor
This is a comparison where one thing is described in terms of something else.
An example is His house was now his prison
. The idea here is someone feels their house is a place where they feel trapped, imprisoned or locked in; a place where they lack freedom.
Another example is James launched himself at his opponent
. This makes James sound like a missile, moving quickly and powerfully.
Shakespeare uses pathetic fallacy in Romeo and Juliet when Romeo compares Juliet to the moon: James launched himself at his opponent
. This makes James sound like a missile, moving quickly and powerfully.
Pathetic fallacy
This technique involves giving human emotions to non-human objects. It is often used to create atmosphere by suggesting that the weather or other natural phenomena have feelings - feelings that might reflect the emotions of the characters.
Shakespeare uses pathetic fallacy in Romeo and Juliet:
Here Romeo suggests that the moon is envious of Juliet's beauty.
Personification
This is a comparison where something non-human (personificationA particular type of image in which an inanimate object is given human characteristics.) is described in human terms.
An example is Death stalked the battlefield
. Death is being portrayed as a figure or person hunting for someone.
Synaesthesia
Synaesthesia is a technique in which one sense is used to represent another, or where a sense is used to add meaning to an unrelated experience, eg:
- "feeling blue" uses colour and the sense of sight to describe emotion
- "bitter cold" uses the sense of taste (bitterness) to describe temperature and the sense of touch
Synecdoche
This means using part of something to represent the whole, eg:
- referring to a 'set of wheels' to mean a car
- referring to 'boots on the ground' to refer to soldiers in an army
It can also mean using a whole to represent a part, eg:
- referring to "the whole world" to mean people generally or everyone in a group
- referring to "Downing Street" to mean the Prime Minister or someone else who works for the PM
Transferred epithet
An epithet is an adjective used to describe a key characteristic of a person, place or thing. For example 'terrible' in Ivan the Terrible.
Transferred epithet is a technique where the epithet is used to describe something other than the person or thing it actually refers to.
For example in Happy Birthday
, it is the person whose birthday it is who is happy, not the birthday itself.