Match the definition to the word. 1. imitation of natural sounds understatement 2. repetition of initial consonant sounds hyperbole 3. repetition of vowel sounds personification 4. saying less than is meant alliteration 5. a part representing the whole simile 6. attributing human characteristics to inanimate objects assonance 7. blatant exaggeration metaphor 8. discrepancy between what is said and what is meant onomatopoeia 9. comparison without like or as irony 10. comparison using like or as metonymy NEXT QUESTION ASK FOR HELP

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You will find the answers for all 10 definitions attached bellow. Every match also has a thorough explanation of what is happening in each pairing and why it is happening. 
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1. Imitation of natural sounds - onomatopoeia  

Some examples of onomatopeias are "smash", "clap", "pop", "bang" "cough" and "moo", because all these words imitate the sound they describe.

2. Repetition of initial consonant sounds - Alliteration  

It is a stylistic literary technique in which neighboring words have the same initial consonant sound. For example, "I find Fridays fun"

3. Repetition of vowel sounds - Assonance

This stylistic literary technique is found in a text when words nearby repeat the same vowel sound. For example, "Dear, do not fear me" and "That cat is bad"

4. Saying less than is meant  - Understatement

Understatement is when we intentionally make a situation seem less important than it really is. For example, When someone says "I have a little problem" when he or she has been diagnosed with a brain tumor, which it is a great big deal.

5. A part representing the whole -  Metonymy

Metonymy uses a term that stands in for an object or concept. For example, in the sentence "Let me give you a hand.”, "Hand" stands in for "help".

6. Attributing human characteristics to inanimate objects - Personification

Personification is when a thing, idea, abstract qualities, nature, emotions or event is given human characteristics. For example, "The wind hugged me".

7. Blatant exaggeration - Hyperbole

Hyperbole is a way of speaking or writing in an exaggerated manner used to emphasize, to add humor or to gain attention on something. For example, "I just ate the biggest burger in the world in a minute"

8. Discrepancy between what is said and what is meant  - Irony

For example, imagine you have spent all the week sick at home, and can not wait to feel better so that you go out, and just the day you feel well enough, it starts raining nonstop, you may say "Oh, It's great it's raining" when you don't actually mean it.

9. Comparison without like or as - Metaphor

A metaphor is a figure of speech that asserts that one element (person, animal, thing, quality, event, etc.) is similar to another element, not literally but figuratively; and it does not use words such as "like" or "as" to make the comparison. For example, "She is a summer breeze"

10. Comparison using like or as - Simile

For example, "She is like a summer breeze", "I am as polite as your daughter" and "My dog is gentle like an angle"