12 Literary Devices You Should Know - English with Jennifer

👉👉What do YouTube members get? More practice! Your monthly contribution supports my work on YT. Click the JOIN button to view the perks. 🌟 Language tasks 2x/week on the community tab 🌟 Custom audio GIFs for chat apps 🌟 Access to a member-only archive of recorded livestreams (13 hours) Want EVEN MORE practice? Join me on Patreon. 👉 ❇️Livestreams ❇️Bonus videos ❇️1:1 monthly calls ❇️❇️In the month of March 2021, Super Members (and higher) are submitting short movie reviews for live editing. Join before March 12 to participate. Index 0:01 Introduction 0:34 Idiom 2:03 Simile and Metaphor 3:30 Analogy 4:10 Hyperbole 4:38 Irony (and sarcasm) 6:20 Pun 7:29 Parallelism 8:36 Personification 9:23 Oxymoron 10:33 Onomatopoeia 11:19 Alliteration 👂Was there a word or phrase in this lesson you would like to practice saying? Consider using as a pronunciation and vocabulary tool. Filter results for American English. 📹More videos each week on Instagram 📱Download the English with Jennifer Alarm Clock & Reminder app. 🔹Short audio lessons to boost your English 🔹Alarms/reminders to keep your studies on track Visit my Community tab for announcements and helpful posts: Follow me! I offer more videos and exercises on my website. 👩‍🏫Are you interested in private lessons? View my calendar. Learn how to book a lesson here: Let me help you reach your language goals with customized lessons and personal feedback. Use the contact form to request a specific day and time. ABOUT ME: Former classroom teacher. Published author. Conference presenter. Online instructor. I’ve been online since 2007, posting videos for students, blogging for teachers, and providing different forms of language support. My goal is to make language studies enjoyable and productive. For more info and resources, visit . TEACHERS: Visit my Pearson-sponsored ELT blog for tips and activity handouts. Images retrieved from Pixabay. 🎞️Movie and TV Clips Used in this English Lesson DISCLAIMER: I do not own any rights to the following works. I chose to use short excerpts for educational purposes. Tootsie (1982) Columbia Pictures 1:49 This Is Us (2016) Season 1, Episode 10 3:27 The Cutting Edge (1992) MGM 3:42 Anne of Green Gables (1995) Season 1, Episode 1, Part 1 4:39 The Wedding Singer (1998) Juno Pix et al. 6:11 Groundhog Day (1993) Columbia Pictures 7:16, 12:08 Ghostbusters (1984) Sony Pictures 8:06 Independence Day (1996) Twentieth Century Fox 8:23 Waiting (2005) Eden Rock Media et al. 9:19 All the President’s Men (1976) Wildwood Enterprises 9:44 Star Trek (1966) Season 3, Episode 2 10:09 Why Him? (2016) Twentieth Century Fox 10:23 Saved by the Bell (1989) Season 1, Episode 2 11:14 👩‍🏫Other English lessons to watch: Book idioms Hyperbole Homophones Parallel Structure Intensifiers and Downtoners Onomatopoeia Live reading and informal analysis of Tennyson’s “Ring Out, Wild Bells“
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