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Figures of Speech — Spot Them in Seconds

📚 Literature  ·  ⏱️ 8 min read  ·  Updated June 2026

The big idea

A figure of speech is language used in a non-literal way for effect — to paint a picture, stress a point or create music in a line. In the exam you are usually asked to identify the figure in a given sentence. The trick is to learn the one signal that gives each figure away.

हिन्दी: हर अलंकार की पहचान का एक "signal" होता है — वही याद कर लो, तो सेकंडों में जवाब मिल जाएगा।

The comparison family

FigureOne-line testExample
SimileCompares using like / asShe is as brave as a lion.
MetaphorDirect comparison, no like/asThe classroom is a battlefield.
PersonificationHuman quality given to a non-humanThe wind whispered through the trees.
ApostropheAddress to absent person / abstract / dead"O Death, where is thy sting?"
MetonymyName of one thing for a related thingThe Crown (= the monarchy) decided.
SynecdocheA part stands for the whole (or vice-versa)All hands (= sailors) on deck.
⚠️ Metaphor vs Simile: the only difference is the words like/as. "Her smile is sunshine" = metaphor; "Her smile is like sunshine" = simile.

Contrast & exaggeration family

FigureOne-line testExample
HyperboleDeliberate exaggerationI have told you a million times.
LitotesUnderstatement via a double negativeShe is not unkind (= quite kind).
OxymoronTwo opposite words side by sideSweet sorrow; deafening silence.
ParadoxA whole statement that seems self-contradictory yet true"The child is father of the man."
AntithesisBalanced opposite ideas in one sentence"Man proposes, God disposes."
IronySays the opposite of what is meant"What lovely weather!" (in a storm)
EuphemismA mild word for a harsh ideaHe passed away (= died).
PunPlay on words / double meaningA bicycle can't stand — it's two-tyred.
💡 Oxymoron vs Paradox: oxymoron is just two words ("living death"); paradox is a whole statement that contradicts itself but holds a truth.

Sound family (the "music" of poetry)

  • Alliteration — same consonant sound at the start of nearby words: "The fair breeze blew."
  • Assonance — repeated vowel sounds: "the rain in Spain."
  • Onomatopoeia — the word imitates the sound: buzz, hiss, clang, murmur.
  • Transferred Epithet — adjective shifted to the wrong noun: a "sleepless night" (the person is sleepless, not the night).
Exam micro-drill: Identify each — (a) "Life is a journey." (b) "as cold as ice." (c) "The stars danced." (d) "jumbo shrimp."
Answers: (a) metaphor (b) simile (c) personification (d) oxymoron.

← Back to all study notes  ·  Notes by Dr Pankaj Tiwari, English Lecturer & Author.