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Imagery in poetry, music, and prose can use language to represent any of our senses – visual (see), auditory (hear), olfactory (smell), gustatory (taste), tactile (touch), organic (internal sensation) and kinesthetic (movement).

Handsome roosters still dream about beautiful hens: organic / figurative

They go up and down steep hills: Kinesthetic/ literary

Their legs take cold showers of morning dew on the weeds: tactile/ literary

Step aside to make way for their rushing feet:

They hear the peyee-peeyee of the crickets, and the twee-twee of half-awake lizards

They run …like fish dancing with sea waves

The bread sellers rushing to keep their breads hot for their customers

Roads of white turf and roads of red clay

Butterflies brush their powder-covered wings against the children’s sweat-dripping faces

Singing their grandparents’ last words

Learning A and learning B, a hum today, a song tomorrow

User Amol Bhor
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1 Answer

6 votes

Answer:

Handsome roosters still dream about beatiful hens:visual imagery

they go up and down steep hill:kinesthic imagery

thier legs take cold shower of the morning dew on weeds:Tactile imagery

User Galo Do Leste
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8.1k points