Relacionar Columnas Language features card matchingVersión en línea Match the language feature to the description or example. por Ruth North 1 Tone 2 Adverb 3 Pathetic fallacy 4 First/Second/Third person 5 Onomatopoeia 6 Repetition 7 Noun 8 Metaphor 9 Rule of 3 10 Simile 11 Polysyndeton 12 Statistics 13 Lexical field 14 Colloquialism 15 Verb 16 Adjective 17 Dramatic irony 18 Personification 19 Lists 20 Alliteration Numbers, facts, data, dates, amounts, ages: numbers we can check if we want to. I, you or them Words that relate to the topic - for example, lots of medical words when you are describing a hospital. A comparison that uses the words “like” or “as” e.g. he was like an eager puppy Matching consonant sounds: silently slithering snakes Doing word: go, saw, tries, thinks, agreeing. A thing or animal does human things. Repetition of three things or even the same thing repeated three times. Using the same word or phrase more than once. Informal or local language, sometimes using slang. Word that describes a verb: successfully, late, politely, brutally. Word that describes a noun: small, funny, orange, tired. Giving a number of examples, things or ideas. Words that sound like sounds: bang! splosh! whoosh! trickle We know things that the characters don't. The weather matches the tone: the rained poured down as he sadly walked away. Naming word: dog, cat, college, Barnsley, Sheffield Wednesday, Primark, Ruth. The overall feeling, attitude or mood of a text: the vibe. Comparing without using like or as: she was a tornado of energy. Using and or or in a list instead of commas.