Opening subject page...
Loading your content
Learn to spot similes, metaphors, and other colorful language so you can understand what authors really mean.
Have you ever told a friend, "I'm so hungry I could eat a horse"? You didn't really mean you'd eat a horse! You were using figurative language — words that paint a picture instead of meaning exactly what they say.
Writers have been using figurative language for thousands of years. It makes stories exciting, poems beautiful, and descriptions come alive. Let's look at how this idea has grown over time!
On the ISEE, you will read passages that use figurative descriptions. The test will ask you what these descriptions mean. Don't worry — once you learn the tricks, you'll be a pro at spotting them!
There are several kinds of figurative language. Each one works differently, but they all do the same job: they help you see, hear, or feel what the writer is describing. Let's meet the main types!
Let's look at a diagram that shows how your brain should work when you spot figurative language in a passage. Follow the arrows from what the words say to what they really mean!
Notice how we didn't stop at the words "stars danced." We asked, "What does this really mean?" That's the key skill the ISEE tests. The correct answer will always match the real meaning behind the figurative description, not the exact words.
On the ISEE, you'll read a passage and then answer questions about it. Some questions will ask about figurative descriptions. Here's what those questions usually look like:
Each type of figurative language has clue words that help you spot it. Think of yourself as a detective looking for clues! Let's see them side by side.
Here's a quick trick: if you see "like" or "as," it's probably a simile. If something non-human is doing human things, it's personification. If it sounds way too extreme to be true, it's hyperbole. Easy!
Here's a short passage and a question just like what you'd see on the ISEE. Let's work through it step by step. You've got this!
Question: When the author says Maya "became a rocket," what does this mean?
The ISEE test makers are tricky! They put in wrong answers that might fool you. Let's learn the most common traps so you can dodge them like a pro.
| Trap Type | What It Looks Like | How to Beat It |
|---|---|---|
| Too Literal | If passage says "a blanket of snow," the trap answer says "someone put a blanket outside." | Ask: "Does this answer take the words too seriously?" If yes, cross it out! |
| Wrong Mood | If the passage is happy but the answer describes something sad or scary. | Check: Does this answer match the feeling of the passage? If not, cross it out! |
| Close but Off | The answer is partly right but adds information not in the passage. | Stick to what the passage actually says. Don't add your own ideas! |
| Too Extreme | The answer uses words like "always," "never," or "the most ___ ever." | Extreme answers are usually wrong. Look for the calm, reasonable choice. |
Sometimes the ISEE doesn't just ask what figurative language means. It asks why the author used it. That's a deeper question, but you can handle it!
| Author's Purpose | What the Author Is Trying to Do | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Create a mood | Make you feel happy, sad, scared, or excited. | "The shadows crept across the floor" makes a spooky mood. |
| Help you picture it | Make a scene come alive in your mind. | "The sunset painted the sky in shades of orange and pink" helps you see it. |
| Show a character's feelings | Reveal how a character feels without saying it directly. | "Her heart sank" shows she is disappointed. |
| Make a point stronger | Use exaggeration or comparison to emphasize an idea. | "The test was a mountain" emphasizes how hard it was. |
As you keep practicing, you'll start to notice figurative language everywhere — in books, songs, and even conversations! That's a sign you're becoming a stronger reader.
Read each short passage carefully, then answer the question. Remember to look for clue words, think about the real meaning, and use process of elimination!
Figurative language uses words in creative ways to paint pictures in your mind. The five main types are similes (comparisons using "like" or "as"), metaphors (saying one thing IS another), personification (giving human traits to non-human things), hyperbole (extreme exaggeration), and imagery (words that appeal to your five senses).
On the ISEE, always read the questions first, then read the passage. When you find a figurative phrase, ask: "What does this really mean?" Use context clues from the sentences around it. Watch out for trap answers that take the words too literally or don't match the passage's mood. Use process of elimination and always answer every question — there's no penalty for guessing! Great job finishing this lesson. You're ready to tackle figurative language on the ISEE!