ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


ELA Videos 174 videos

CAHSEE 1.3 Passage Drill
337 Views

CAHSEE 1.3 Passage Drill. Which of the following is the best way to express the meaning of the word alumni in this sentence?

CAHSEE 10.2 Passage Drill
180 Views

CAHSEE 10.2 Passage Drill. Which of the following is the best way to express the meaning of the word "invaluable" in this sentence?

CAHSEE 1.5 Passage Drill
644 Views

CAHSEE 1.5 Passage Drill. In this line from the story, the words buzz and pulsated suggest the crowd is...what?

See All

CAHSEE ELA 9.3 Ambiguities 181 Views


Share It!


Description:

CAHSEE ELA 9.3 Ambiguities. Which of the following is an example of figurative language in the previous passage?

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

Here's your shmoop du jour... Hey, this fella looks familiar... if you so

00:08

wish, you can hit pause and review...

00:10

Which of the following is an example of figurative language in the previous passage?

00:16

And here are the potential answers:

00:21

So... what is this question asking?

00:23

What does figurative mean??

00:25

Uh... no... that would be a figure skater... nice figure, though.

00:30

Start with the semi-opposite cousin of figurative: the word LITERAL. Literal means that something

00:37

actually happened.

00:38

As in "he was literally in the very first row". So... not just ONE of the first rows...

00:44

LITERALLY the very first.

00:47

But if we said "his seats were so good he was sitting ON the ice..."

00:51

Now we're probably not speaking literally.

00:54

If we look at the 4 answer choices...

00:56

...it appears that C is the only one that isn't literal.

01:00

There are no actual, physical hopes that someone can get... up.

01:04

Instead, "get your hopes up" is an idiom meaning "make you hopeful."

01:09

So our answer is C.

01:10

As in, "Checking."