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Figure of Speech Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A figure of speech generator serves up the building blocks of vivid writing — simile, metaphor, irony, and more — each with a clear example so you can use them on purpose. Choose how many you want and it returns a shuffled set: a simile comparing with like or as, a metaphor that says one thing is another, personification that gives the wind a voice, hyperbole that exaggerates for effect. Students, writers, and teachers use it to study literary devices, enliven dull prose, or build a lesson. Each entry names the device and shows it in action, so you can recognise it when reading and reach for it when writing. Pick a device that suits your sentence, then craft your own example around your subject. Figures of speech turn plain statements into images a reader feels, but they work best used deliberately and sparingly.

Read the complete guide — 4 min read

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How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Choose how many figures of speech you want.
  2. Generate a set and read each example.
  3. Pick a device that fits your sentence.
  4. Write your own example around your subject.

Use Cases

  • Studying literary devices for class
  • Enlivening plain prose with imagery
  • Building an English lesson or quiz
  • Recognising devices while reading
  • Adding deliberate craft to writing

Tips

  • Learn each device from its example.
  • Use them deliberately, not in every line.
  • Match the device to the effect you want.
  • Recognise them while reading to learn faster.

FAQ

what is a figure of speech

A word or phrase used in a non-literal way for effect, like a metaphor or hyperbole. It conveys meaning through image, comparison, or twist rather than plain statement.

simile or metaphor?

A simile compares using like or as ("brave as a lion"); a metaphor states the comparison directly ("he is a lion"). Both create an image, but the metaphor is more forceful.

can i overuse these

Yes. Figures of speech are seasoning, not the meal. Used deliberately at key moments they add power; piled into every sentence they exhaust the reader and lose impact.

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