Sally sells seashells by the seashore. - Alliteration, The cat sat on the mat, waiting patiently. - Assonance, The buzzing bee flew past my ear. - Onomatopoeia, He struck a streak of bad luck. - Consonance, The wind whistled wildly through the windows. - Alliteration, Splash! The fish jumped out of the water. - Onomatopoeia, The gentle hum of the fan helped me sleep. - Onomatopoeia, Peter picked a peck of pickled peppers. - Alliteration, The snake hissed softly in the grass. - Onomatopoeia, Mike's bike likes to ride at night. - Assonance, The classroom was a zoo during recess. - Metaphor, Her smile was as bright as the sun. - Simile, I’ve told you a million times to clean your room! - Hyperbole, The wind whispered through the trees. - Personification, "What a pleasant day," she said as it poured outside. - Irony, He’s a walking dictionary. - Metaphor, The car danced across the icy road. - Personification, The homework was as easy as pie. - Simile, I could eat a horse right now. - Hyperbole, The fire station burned down yesterday. - Irony, Her smile was as bright as the sun. - Simile, The world is a stage, and we are all merely players. - Metaphor, It was so cold, even polar bears were shivering. - Hyperbole, The wind whispered through the trees. - Personification, I’ve told you a million times to clean your room! - Hyperbole, A fire station burning down is quite unexpected. - Irony, He’s a walking dictionary. - Metaphor, The leaves danced in the breeze. - Personification, Her eyes sparkled like diamonds. - Simile, Uses descriptive words that appeal to the reader’s physical senses so that they can create a mental picture of the ideas being presented - Imagery, It is use of words with similar consonant sounds. - Consonance, Compares two different things by linking them with the word 'like' or 'as'. - Simile, Make outrageous exaggerations, often in a humorous way, to emphasize a point. - Hyperbole, Gives human qualities or characteristics to things that are not human. - Personification, Repetition of the same initial sound in words that are adjacent of close to one another. - Alliteration, Words that evoke or bring to mind images and sounds to help readers sense understand, or experiences the meaning of a literary works. - Musical Devices, States a contrast between the literal meaning of a word and its intended meaning. - Irony, Uses words that imitate or mimic specific sounds created by nature. - Onomatopoeia, It is the use of two or more words with the same vowel sound but different consonant sounds. - Assonance, Like simile, compares two different things but without the word 'as' or 'like'. - Metaphor,

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