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Figurative Language Allusion
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Allusion. Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the example of Samson and Delilah. Biblical Allusion-

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: Allusion.  Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the example of Samson and Delilah. Biblical Allusion-

Figurative LanguageAllusion

Page 2: Allusion.  Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the example of Samson and Delilah. Biblical Allusion-

Allusion

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8OW7WUMdJeY• Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the

example of Samson and Delilah.• Biblical Allusion- Delilah was bad for Samson and

caused his demise but he loved her. The author is saying that loving this woman has caused bad things to come upon him.

DO NOW:-Open to the Allusion page in yourFigurative Language booklet.-Read the definition, example, and non-example

Page 3: Allusion.  Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the example of Samson and Delilah. Biblical Allusion-

What is being alluded to?What is the reference implying? What does it mean?

Page 4: Allusion.  Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the example of Samson and Delilah. Biblical Allusion-

What is being alluded to?What is the reference implying? What does it mean?

Page 5: Allusion.  Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the example of Samson and Delilah. Biblical Allusion-

Allusions • What is being alluded to?• What is the reference implying? What does it

mean?

• “I was surprised his nose was not growing like Pinocchio’s.”

• This refers to the story of Pinocchio, where his nose grew whenever he told a lie. It is from The Adventures of Pinocchio, written by Carlo Collodi.

Page 6: Allusion.  Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the example of Samson and Delilah. Biblical Allusion-

Allusions• What/who is being alluded to?

• “When she lost her job, she acted like a Scrooge, and refused to buy anything that wasn’t necessary.”

• Scrooge was an extremely stingy character from Charles Dickens’, A Christmas Carol. The sentence explains the allusion for the reader.

Page 7: Allusion.  Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the example of Samson and Delilah. Biblical Allusion-

Allusions• What is being alluded to?• What is the reference implying? What does it

mean?

• “I thought the software would be useful, but it was a Trojan Horse.”

• This refers to the horse that the Greeks built that contained all the soldiers. It was given as a gift to the enemy during the Trojan War and, once inside the enemy's walls, the soldiers broke out. By using trickery, the Greeks won the war.

Page 8: Allusion.  Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the example of Samson and Delilah. Biblical Allusion-

Allusions• What is being alluded to?• What is the reference implying? What does

it mean?

• “He was a real Romeo with the ladies.”

• Romeo was a character in Shakespeare’s play, Romeo and Juliet, and was very romantic in expressing his love for Juliet.

Page 9: Allusion.  Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the example of Samson and Delilah. Biblical Allusion-

Allusions• What is being alluded to?• What is the reference implying? What does it

mean?

• “Chocolate was her Achilles’ heel.”

• This means that her weakness was her love of chocolate. Achilles is a character in Greek mythology who was invincible. His mother dipped him in magical water when he was a baby, and she held him by the heel. The magic protected him all over, except for his heel.

Page 10: Allusion.  Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the example of Samson and Delilah. Biblical Allusion-

Allusions• What is being alluded to?• What is the reference implying? What does it

mean?

• “You’re killing me, Smalls.”

• The movie, The Sandlot, has been quoted so often this hyperbole immediatelycalls to mind scenes of Smalls learning something new.

Page 11: Allusion.  Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the example of Samson and Delilah. Biblical Allusion-

• Because allusions make reference to something other than what is directly being discussed, you may miss an allusion or fail to understand it if you do not know the underlying biblical story, literary tale or other reference point.

• Luckily, today it is easy to look these things up so when someone references something you do not understand, you can easily turn to the Internet to learn enough to grasp the allusion for yourself.

Page 12: Allusion.  Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the example of Samson and Delilah. Biblical Allusion-

Homework

•Create a "BRAGGART RAP" that includes 3 lines that use Allusion and Hyperbole in them. •Then EXPLAIN how each one works. Have fun talking yourself up! GO BIG! Brag it up.

Page 13: Allusion.  Jot down the allusions you hear before we get to the example of Samson and Delilah. Biblical Allusion-

Example…• "I'm as tall as the Tower of Babble / but I won't fall /

Drive a gold limo in China / long as the Great Wall"• This uses the allusion "Tower of Babble" because in

the Bible there was a king who wanted to build a tower that reached up to Heaven so he could talk to God. He was warned not to, but he ignored the warning and the tower was knocked down. I am saying that I'm "the tallest thing ever built" but I'll stay up! This also uses the hyperbole "a limo as long as the Great Wall in China". I'm not sure it's even possible to have a vehicle that long!?