Exploring figurative language with works of art activates students’ imaginations while allowing them to make insightful comparisons and analogies.
Use or adapt the template below as a prompt for writing similes and metaphors.
A simile is a descriptive phrase that compares two things using like or as. A simile is one way to create an immediate visual image of what you are describing. For instance, you could compare a subject in a work of art (dog) using an adjective (white) with another noun (snow):
This dog is as white as snow.
You can also compare a subject (shawl) directly with another noun (night) to help:
Her shawl is like night.
Select an object from a work of art, and use nouns and adjective to try writing a couple of similes.
This __________ is as __________ as __________.
This __________ is like __________.
A metaphor is a writing device that makes an implied comparison that forms an expressive and complex image. Metaphors enliven poetry, stories, and conversations by creating a visual picture to describe something. For instance, the simile mentioned above, “Her shawl is like night” could be turned into a metaphor by saying: Her shawl is night, concealing her vulnerability in darkness. Here are some other examples of metaphors: Her shawl is the night sky, expanses of black scattered with light. Her shawl is smoke, rising warmly from the fire at her feet. Her blouse is a pastry, with cotton candy sleeves and cuffs of swirling taffy. Now you try!