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Group 1

Azizah Nur
Desy Christianty Waruwu
Fitri Anisah Sitorus
Fitri Mardiyana
Friska Octavia
EXTENDING
IMAGERY
Definitions of Extending Imagery

 Imagery is a technique of writing


which uses descriptive language to
engage the reader’s senses. The most
common is visual. A good description
can employ words of color, light and
texture to conjure a mental image
within the reader
two main reasons we use imagery a:

1. To save time and words.


2. To reach the reader's senses.
EXTENDING IMAGERY

1. VISUAL IMAGERY
2. AUDITORY IMAGERY
3.TACTILE IMAGERY
4. OLFACTORY IMAGERY
5.GUSTATORY IMAGERY
USE OF IMAGERY
VISUAL SIGHT
AUDITORY SOUND
TACTILE TOUCH
OLFACTORY SMELL
GUSTATORY TASTE
VISUAL IMAGERY
 For example :
down through our yard, past the
grapevines hung with buzzing
Japanese-beetle traps, to the yellow
brick building, with its tall smokestack
and wide playing fields, where he
taught
AUDITORY IMAGERY
 a soundtrack: choo-k-choo-k-choo-k-
choo-k-choo-k--the metronomic
rhythm of an Amtrak train rolling
down the line to California, a sound
that called to mind an old camera reel
moving frames of images along a linear
track, telling a story
TACTILE IMAGERY
Example:
I watched him, his hard little body,
skinny and bare, saw him wince slightly
as he pulled up around his vitals the
small, soggy, icy garment. As he
buckled the swollen belt, suddenly my
groin felt the chill of death.
OLFACTORY IMAGERY
 I lay still and took another minute to
smell: I smelled the warm, sweet, all-
pervasive smell of silage, as well as the
sour dirty laundry spilling over the
basket in the hall
GUSTATORY IMAGERY
Example:
they were delicious
so sweet
and so cold
USING OF IMAGERY
Imagery Using Metaphors

Defines a metaphor as a "direct comparison


between two or more seemingly unrelated
subjects".
• Examples:
-- Amy was a mule. (Imagery Interpretation: Amy
was stubborn)
Imagery Using Similes

Similes are similar to metaphors except that instead of


saying that one thing is another, you would say that
one thing is like another. Although similes do not have
to contain the words "like" or "as",
For example:
Sally's hands were as cold as ice",
the reader would have a far more accurate perception
of the temperature of Sally's hands. The same goes for
describing size, intelligence, breadth, color and all
other matters of description.
Imagery Using Personification

Personification is a type of literary imagery that


involves giving inanimate objects human or
animate qualities

For example:
The dog smiled. (Imagery Interpretation: "Smiled" is a
human quality given to the dog.)

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