Twilight Series Novel Written by Stephenie Meyer
Essay by dina123 • November 15, 2016 • Book/Movie Report • 1,027 Words (5 Pages) • 1,142 Views
About My Love, to My Loves.
Contagious.
Thats one thing have in that smile.
It speaks in language I can understand, telling me everything’s okay.
And i smile too.
And in sudden, i feel safe.
Ai, you just can go home, i’m sure i’m all safe with this guy.
Thanks for making sure that everything’s okay on my first date.
He’s wet.
After taking a pray.
We stopped in one nearest mosque in town.
Just to thank God for finally blessing us of one another.
And Umai. no need to worry, i’m in line.
Thanks for never stop asking me to pray, for someone who loves his God, too.
This time he holds my hand.
On my fear that mom’s angry.
One lighning strikes to my whole body,
And I’m no longer shaking.
Del, you won’t believe that your childhood mate is mature already.
I know I have his back to count on, now I’m saved.
I caught him smiling all way home.
I know he’s in love with the girl on the passenger’s side.
He did’nt say any, but Im sure he felt much.
Dont worry, ndun.
You can take a rest of listening this miss grumpy,
Of how sick it was being a heartbroken.
For now I’m all cured.
In written language, people use the media to print out their thoughts in order to be able to be shared by the reader. It means that between the writer and the reader there is indirect relationship in sharing ideas. Moreover, written language is more formal than spoken. The writer has to follow many writing regulations in order to have good information to share to the reader and easy to be understood.
In written language, one of the media to share the ideas is novel. In this paper, Twilight Series novel written by Stephenie Meyer will be used as the source of data.
This studies about one of language development, focusing in Figurative language which can be found in literature and poetry where the writing appeals to the senses. It can do this by giving a word or phrase a specific meaning that may be different than the literal definition. Beside some specific types of word or word meaning such as: Metaphor, Simile, personification, hyperbole, and symbolism, there is alsossome sound devices are also viewed as figurative language because they give a new perspective on the word such as Onomotopoeia and in this paper I’ll be more focusing in Onomotopeia.
There are at least two reasons why Onomotopoeia is chosen to be
researched. First, in the preliminary research, there are many kinds of onomotopoeia used both in comics and poetry but I rarely find any research that discuss about it in novel, especially in general novels. Most of them are mostly found in kids storybook and comis or poetry that I already mentioned above so I’m interesting in analysing onomotopeia in novels.
Second, Twilight Saga by Stephanie Meyer is such a phenomenal literary works, especially novels. Twilightis a story about young-adult vampire-romance which is written into a novel by author
Stephenie Meyer. This novel introduces seventeen-years-old Isabella "Bella" Swan, who moves from Phoenix, Arizona to Forks, Washington and finds her life in danger when she falls in love with a vampire, Edward Cullen. This is such an interesting novel because the story is really amazing because of its fantasy and romance genre. This novel is also one of best selling novels that is a favorite of most of teenagers siince the release of the first novel, Twilight, in 2005, t is such an interesting study to be researched.
There are four series of Twilight Saga novel, they are Twilight, New Moon, Eclipse, and Breaking Dawn. The series is told primarily from Bella's point of view, with the epilogue of Eclipse and Part II of Breaking Dawn being told from the viewpoint of character Jacob Black, a werewolf.
- REVIEW OF LITERATURE
- THEORITICAL FRAMEWORK
The term “onomatopoeia” was coined by J. R. Firth in 1930 to define a phoneme or a group of phonemes that had “recognizable semantic associations due to recurrent appearance in words of similar meaning” (n.p.), such as“slime”, “slob”, “slop” that seem to imply some kind of negative dampness (Chalker & Weiner, 1994). Others such as Azzam (2006) have defined onomatopoetic expressions as those whose sounds mimic “a sound occurring in the real world” such as “miaow”, “hiccup” and “burp” (122).
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