Figurative Language In Hugh Pentecost's 'Kind Of A Murder'

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Different types of figurative language can change the different readers point of view and the nature of the story. The author of “Kind of a Murder”, Hugh Pentecost, uses figurative language multiple times in his short story, one being the amount of times onomatopoeia was used to the sad parts of the story. In the Morgan MIlitary Academy, it seemed everyone was afraid around the nicknamed headmaster, Old Beaver,at Morgan Military. So when the students heard him coming down the hall in a particular scene, the story reads the sound of shoes, using onomatopoeia. In the text it reads “ordinally his shoes squeaked. You can hear him coming from quite a distance away squeak-squeak, squeak-squeak” (Pentecost 55). The evidence illustrates that the students