मराठी
महाराष्ट्र राज्य शिक्षण मंडळएस.एस.सी (इंग्रजी माध्यम) इयत्ता १० वी

The Figure of Speech ‘Apostrophe’ exists throughout the poem. Pick out the line where the poet directly addresses. the grief in his heart ____________ ____________

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प्रश्न

The Figure of Speech ‘Apostrophe’ exists throughout the poem. Pick out the line where the poet directly addresses.

the grief in his heart

  1. ____________
  2. ____________
टीपा लिहा
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उत्तर

  1. “But O heart! heart! heart!”
  2. “O the bleeding drops of red”
  3. “But I, with mournful tread”
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Figures of Speech
  या प्रश्नात किंवा उत्तरात काही त्रुटी आहे का?
पाठ 4.3: O Captain ! My Captain ! - English Workshop [पृष्ठ १४३]

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बालभारती English Coursebook [Marathi] Standard 10 Maharashtra State Board
पाठ 4.3 O Captain ! My Captain !
English Workshop | Q 4.(A).(b) | पृष्ठ १४३

संबंधित प्रश्‍न

                                                                                      Error                     Correction

One day a wonderful plate full in gold

fell from Heaven into a courtyard of

a temple at Benaras; so on the

plate these words were inscribe.

"A gift from Heaven to he who  

loves better". The priests at once

made a announcement that every

-day at noon, all which would like    

 to claimed the plate should come

eg                    in                             of
(a) ________ ____________
(b) ________ ____________
(c) ________ ____________
(d) ________ ____________
(e) ________ ____________
(f) ________ ____________
(g) ________ ____________
(h) ________ ____________

 


An oxymoron is a figure of speech that combines normally-contradictory terms. The most common form of oxymoron involves an adjective-noun combination of two words like- failed success
Writers often use an oxymoron to call attention to an apparent contradiction. For example, Wilfred Owen's poem The Send-off refers to soldiers leaving for the front line, who "lined the train with faces grimly gay." The oxymoron 'grimly gay' highlights the

contradiction between how the soldiers feel and how they act: though they put on a brave face and act cheerful, they feel grim. Some examples of oxymorons are- dark sunshine, cold sun, living dead, dark light, almost exactly etc. The story Mrs. Packletide's Tiger has a number of oxymorons. Can you identify them and write them down in your notebooks?


Identify Shakespeare's use of personification in the poem.


Alliteration is the repetition of sounds in words, usually the first sound. Sibilance is a special form of alliteration using the softer consonants that create hissing sounds, or sibilant sounds. These consonants and digraphs include s, sh, th, ch, z, f, x, and soft c.

Onomatopoeia is a word that imitates the sound it represents for a rhetorical or artistic effect of bringing out the full flavor of words. The sounds literally make the meaning in such words as “buzz,” “crash,” “whirr,” “clang” “hiss,” “purr,” “squeak,” etc.lt Is also used by poets to convey their subject to the reader. For example, In the last lines of Sir Alfred Tennyson’s poem ‘Come Down, O Maid’, m and n sounds produce an atmosphere of murmuring Insects:

… the moan of doves in immemorial elms,
And murmuring of innumerable bees.
Notice how D H Lawrence uses both these devices effectively in the following stanza.
He reached down from a fissure in the earth-wall in the gloom
And trailed his yellow-brown slackness soft-bellied down, over the edge of the stone trough
And rested his throat upon the stone bottom,
And where the water had dripped from the tap, in a small clearness,
He sipped with his straight mouth,
Softly drank through his straight gums, into his slack long body,
Silently.

To what effect has the poet used these devices? How has it added to your understanding of the subject of the poem? You may record your understanding of snake characteristics under the following headings:
(a) Sound
(b) Movement
(c) Shape


Although this text speaks of factual events and situations of misery it transforms these situations with an almost poetical prose into a literary experience. How does it do so? Here are some literary devices:

• Hyperbole is a way of speaking or writing that makes something sound better or more exciting than it really is. For example: Garbage to them is gold.

 A Metaphor, as you may know, compares two things or ideas that are not very similar. A metaphor describes a thing in terms of a single quality or feature of some other thing; we can say that a metaphor “transfers” a quality of one thing to another. For example: The road was a ribbon of light.

• Simile is a word or phrase that compares one thing with another using the words “like” or “as”. For example: As white as snow.

Carefully read the following phrases and sentences taken from the text. Can you identify the literary device in each example?

1. Saheb-e-Alam which means the lord of the universe is directly in contrast to what Saheb is in reality.

2. Drowned in an air of desolation.

3. Seemapuri, a place on the periphery of Delhi yet miles away from it, metaphorically.

4. For the children it is wrapped in wonder; for the elders it is a means of survival.

5. As her hands move mechanically like the tongs of a machine, I wonder if she knows the sanctity of the bangles she helps make.

6. She still has bangles on her wrist, but not light in her eyes.

7. Few airplanes fly over Firozabad.

8. Web of poverty.

9. Scrounging for gold.

10. And survival in Seemapuri means rag-picking. Through the years, it has acquired the proportions of a fine art.

11. The steel canister seems heavier than the plastic bag he would carry so lightly over his shoulders.


Find out the examples of ‘Metaphor’ from the poem.


When some words, in the line of the poem, express the same idea in different ways, the figure of speech used is ‘Tautology’.

For example: 

...happy and joyful.
...motionless and still.

  • Pick out two examples of ‘Tautology’ from the poem.

Pick out one example of the following Figure of Speech.

Antithesis


Pick out one example of the following Figure of Speech.

Repetition


Pick out from the poem two examples of the following.

Onomatopoeia


Pick out from the poem two examples of each.

Alliteration


Pick out from the poem two examples of each.

Metaphor


Pick out from the poem two examples of each.

Transferred Epithet


Choose the correct Figure of speech that occurs in the following line. Justify your choice.

Some shape of beauty moves away the pall ____________.


Choose the correct Figure of speech that occurs in the following line. Justify your choice.

Trees old and young, sprouting a shady boon.


Identify the Figure of Speech in the following line.

No one is respectable or unhappy over the whole earth.


Pick out two lines that contain the following figures of speech.

Inversion


Explain the Figure of Speech in the following line.

Rest in the bottom lay-PUN because.....


Find out lines from the poem that are examples of following Figures of Speech.

Figures of Speech Lines
Repetition .........................
Alliteration .........................
Hyperbole .........................

‘I hear the bright bee hum.’ The poet has used the word ‘hum’ that indicates the sound made by the bee. This is an example of Onomatopoeia. The poet has used different figures of speech like alliteration, inversion, and hyperbole in the poem. Identify them and pick out the lines accordingly.

Alliteration


Alliteration is the occurrence of the same sound at the beginning of words in a phrase, sentence, etc. such as ‘That life is lived it's very best.’

Find out more examples of Alliteration from other poems in your book.


Pick out the examples of Alliteration and Repetition from the (Basketful of Moonlight) poem.


Pick out lines that contain:

Hyperbole


Identify the Figures of speech used from those given in the bracket.

(Simile/ Repetition/ Antithesis/ Personification/ Metaphor/ Alliteration/ Apostrophe)

“And yet don’t look too good, nor talk too wise”


Identify the Figures of speech used from those given in the bracket.

(Simile/ Repetition/ Antithesis/ Personification/ Metaphor/ Alliteration/ Apostrophe)

With worn-out tools ____________.


Pick out lines that contain the following Figures of Speech.

Antithesis (Opposite ideas)


Complete the following example of Hyperbole using words from the bracket below.

She wept____________of tears.


Complete the following examples of Hyperbole using words from the bracket below.

He runs faster than a ____________.


Pick from the poem lines which contain the Figures of speech.

Onomatopoeia


Find from the poem, one example of the following.

Alliteration


Find from the poem, one example of the following.

Repetition


Find from the poem, one example of the following.

Exclamation


Find from the poem, one example of the following.

Tautology


Find from the poem, one example of the following.

Antithesis


Pick out one or two other examples of allusion from the story and comment briefly on the comparison made.


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