Illustration of Pip visiting a graveyard

Great Expectations

by Charles Dickens

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Great Expectations Questions on Metaphor

Great Expectations

In Great Expectations, Charles Dickens utilizes figurative language, including similes, metaphors, and personification, to enhance visualization and humor. For instance, Pip describes Bentley...

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Great Expectations

The business-like manner of Wemmick is illustrated when he enters the prison. As Pip accompanies him, he treats the prisoners like plants in a greenhouse and speaks to them, but his manner is not...

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Great Expectations

Jaggers' reference to Drummle as "the spider" creates a negative impression of Drummle for readers, suggesting he is unpleasant and parasitic. Jaggers, a keen judge of character, subtly reveals...

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Great Expectations

The connection between vegetation and prison imagery in Mr. Pumblechook's shop and Miss Havisham's house symbolizes confinement and the struggle for freedom. In both places, seeds and plants are...

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