Answer Keys: Figurative Language

Grade 4 Reading | FAST Success Kit

Teacher/Parent Resource: This page contains all answers. Keep separate from student materials.
Student Concept Worksheet Answers
Simile or Metaphor?
"Life is like a box of chocolates."
Simile - uses "like" to compare
"Life is a journey."
Metaphor - says life IS a journey (no like/as)
"He is as strong as an ox."
Simile - uses "as" to compare
"She is a ray of sunshine."
Metaphor - says she IS sunshine (no like/as)
Identify the Type (S, M, I, P, H)
1. "The trees danced in the wind."
P (Personification) - Trees can't actually dance; dancing is a human action
2. "My backpack weighs a ton!"
H (Hyperbole) - Extreme exaggeration; backpacks don't actually weigh 2,000 pounds
3. "She sings like an angel."
S (Simile) - Compares using "like"
4. "Don't let the cat out of the bag."
I (Idiom) - Means "don't tell the secret," not literally about a cat
5. "The world is a stage."
M (Metaphor) - Says the world IS a stage (no like/as)
6. "I waited forever for the bus."
H (Hyperbole) - Exaggeration; no one actually waits forever
What Does It Mean?
7. "The test was a piece of cake."
The test was very easy.
8. "His words cut like a knife."
His words were hurtful/painful.
9. "The alarm clock screamed at me to wake up."
The alarm clock made a loud, jarring sound.
10. "I'm so tired I could sleep for a year."
I'm extremely tired.
Practice Worksheet Answers
Passage 1: The Storm
1. "The storm was a monster"
B. Metaphor - Says the storm IS a monster (direct comparison, no like/as)
2. "Lightning cracked across the sky like whips of fire"
Type: Simile - Why: It uses "like" to compare lightning to whips of fire.
3. "The wind screamed" is personification because—
A. Wind cannot actually scream - screaming is a human action
4. "The thunder was so loud it could wake the dead" meaning
The thunder was extremely, incredibly loud. (The exaggeration emphasizes how powerful the sound was.)
Identify the Type
5. "I'm so hungry I could eat a horse."
Hyperbole - Extreme exaggeration
6. "The old car coughed and sputtered..."
Personification - Cars can't actually cough; coughing is a human action
7. "You're driving me up the wall!"
Idiom - Means "you're annoying me," not literally driving up a wall
8. "Her voice was music to his ears."
Metaphor - Says her voice WAS music (no like/as)
Passage 2: Game Day
9. "His heart was a drum beating wildly"
B. A metaphor because it says his heart IS a drum
10. "Keep their eyes on the prize" meaning
Stay focused on the goal; don't get distracted; keep working toward what you want to achieve.
11. Simile from passage
Accept any: "as nervous as cats in a room full of rocking chairs" OR "felt like jelly" OR "as fierce as lions" - Meaning should explain the comparison (e.g., "felt like jelly" means his legs felt weak and wobbly)
12. "Be lions out there!" meaning
The coach wants the team to be brave, fierce, and powerful like lions. The metaphor helps the reader understand she wants them to play aggressively and without fear.
FAST Practice Quiz Answers (Soccer Championship)
1
B. Simile
Uses "like" to compare her heart to a drum.
2
B. The stadium was filled with a huge crowd of fans
The "sea" represents the large number of people, not actual water.
3
B. Stay focused and pay attention
This idiom means to concentrate on what you're doing.
4
C. Hyperbole
Obviously she didn't practice exactly one million times - this is an exaggeration.
5
C. Simile
Uses "as fierce as" to compare - the key word "as" makes it a simile.
6
B. It gives the crowd a human action (holding breath as one being)
The crowd is treated as one being performing a human action.
7
B. The ball moved very fast and powerfully
The simile comparing the ball to a rocket emphasizes speed and power.
8
A. The ball gently touched the net (a goal was scored)
"Kissed" suggests a soft, gentle touch - the ball went into the goal.
9
Accept any two from paragraph 2: "as fierce as lions" (simile), "practiced a million times" (hyperbole), "legs felt like rubber" (simile), "determination was rock-solid" (metaphor)
10
Sample: The figurative language helps the reader feel Emma's emotions and experience the excitement of the game. For example, "her heart was pounding like a drum" helps us understand how nervous and excited she felt. The metaphor "stadium was a sea of screaming fans" creates a vivid picture of the huge, energetic crowd. These comparisons make the story more exciting and help us connect with Emma's feelings.

Scoring Guide

Assessment Total Points Proficient (70%+) Focus Area if Struggling
Student Concept Worksheet 14 points 10+ correct Review simile vs. metaphor
Practice Worksheet 12 points 9+ correct Practice explaining meanings
FAST Practice Quiz 10 points 7+ correct Focus on idioms and hyperbole

Common Errors: Confusing simile and metaphor (remember: like/as = simile); taking idioms literally; not recognizing personification when objects do human actions; confusing hyperbole with lies (hyperbole is intentional exaggeration for effect).