Lesson

Figurative Language

Students learn to spot similes, metaphors, and idioms and explain what those phrases really mean.

Figurative Language

What students learn

Students learn that figurative language helps writers compare, exaggerate, or describe ideas in a way that is richer than literal language. Start with Figurative Language: Similes Say What Something Resembles so students hear the comparison idea first.

Why it matters

Readers meet figurative language in stories, poems, songs, and everyday speech. When students know that a writer may not mean every word literally, they can understand the image or feeling the author is creating. Figurative Language: Metaphors Say One Thing Is Another helps students see how a direct comparison works.

Learn the idea

A simile uses like or as to compare two things. A metaphor makes the comparison without those words. An idiom means something different from the literal words. Figurative Language: Idioms Mean Something Beyond the Words gives students a clear reminder that the reader has to think past the surface meaning.

Try it

Ask the student to sort three phrases into simile, metaphor, or idiom. Then have them write one original example of each. If they get stuck, ask whether the phrase is meant literally or whether it is helping the reader imagine something in a new way.

Parent guide

Keep the practice playful and concrete. Read a phrase aloud, ask what it literally says, then ask what it really means. If the child can explain the difference, they are ready to move on.