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Discover how word pictures make you feel happy, scared, calm, or excited while reading.
Have you ever read a book that made you feel like you were really there? Maybe you could almost smell the cookies baking or feel the cold wind on your face. Writers have been doing this for thousands of years! They use special describing words called imagery (words that help you see, hear, smell, taste, or touch things in your mind).
Imagery is one of a writer's most powerful tools. It doesn't just tell you what happened. It makes you feel what happened. Let's look at how this idea grew over time!
Here is the big question we will answer today: How do word pictures change the feeling (or mood) of a scene? Once you understand this, you'll be ready to answer ISEE questions about tone and mood. Let's go!
Before we practice, let's learn four big ideas. These are the building blocks you need!
Let's look at a diagram that shows how the same place can feel totally different depending on the imagery a writer uses. Check it out!
This is exactly what ISEE questions test! They give you a passage and ask you how the scene feels. Your job is to find the imagery clues — the describing words that paint a picture — and figure out the mood they create.
Let's break down exactly how imagery works to change feelings. Think of it like a chain reaction — one thing leads to the next!
Writers use your five senses to create imagery. Each type of imagery can create a different mood. Let's see how!
| Sense | Type of Imagery | Example (Happy Mood) | Example (Sad Mood) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 👁 Sight | Visual | "bright, colorful kites floated" | "gray clouds covered everything" |
| 👂 Hearing | Auditory | "children laughing on the swings" | "the empty hallway echoed" |
| 👃 Smell | Olfactory | "fresh cookies filled the kitchen" | "damp, musty basement air" |
| 👅 Taste | Gustatory | "sweet, juicy strawberries" | "bitter medicine burned her tongue" |
| ✋ Touch | Tactile | "soft, warm blanket wrapped around him" | "sharp rocks cut into her feet" |
Let's walk through a practice passage together, step by step. Imagine this is on your ISEE test!
Question: How does the imagery in this passage make the scene feel?
Great job! See how we went through it one step at a time? You can do this with any passage on the ISEE. Just find the imagery, check if it's positive or negative, and name the mood!
On the ISEE, the answer choices often use specific mood words. Here are the most common ones and the imagery clues that go with them.
| Mood Word | What It Means | Imagery Clues to Look For |
|---|---|---|
| Cheerful / Joyful | Happy and bright | Sunshine, laughter, bright colors, sweet smells, warm feelings |
| Peaceful / Calm | Quiet and relaxed | Gentle breezes, soft sounds, still water, flowing, slow movement |
| Mysterious / Eerie | Strange and a little scary | Shadows, fog, strange noises, dark corners, whispers |
| Sad / Gloomy | Down and heavy | Rain, gray skies, silence, wilting flowers, cold, emptiness |
| Exciting / Tense | Fast and thrilling | Pounding hearts, rushing wind, loud sounds, racing, flashing lights |
Now that you know how imagery creates mood, here's a bonus: imagery can also help with other ISEE question types! Understanding imagery will help you answer questions about the author's purpose, vocabulary in context, and even main idea.
| Imagery Helps With... | How? |
|---|---|
| Mood / Tone Questions | Directly! Find the imagery and name the feeling it creates. |
| Vocabulary in Context | The imagery around a word helps you figure out its meaning. If everything sounds spooky, a word probably means something dark. |
| Author's Purpose | If an author uses lots of beautiful imagery about nature, the purpose might be to make you appreciate the outdoors. |
| Inference Questions | Imagery can hint at what will happen next. Dark, stormy imagery might mean trouble is coming. |
So learning about imagery isn't just for one type of question. It's a super-skill that helps you across the whole Reading Comprehension section. You've got this!
Time to test what you've learned! Read each mini-passage carefully, look for imagery clues, and pick the best answer. Remember — there's no penalty for guessing on the ISEE, so always choose an answer!
Imagery is when writers use words that appeal to your five senses — sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch — to paint pictures in your mind. The mood is the feeling a scene gives you. Imagery is what creates the mood! Warm, bright, sweet words make a scene feel happy or peaceful. Dark, cold, harsh words make a scene feel scary or sad. The same place can feel totally different depending on the words a writer chooses.
On the ISEE, when you see a question about how a scene "feels" or what mood is created, follow these steps: find the describing words, decide if they feel positive or negative, and name the mood. Use process of elimination to cross out answers that don't match the imagery. You're ready — go show that test what you've learned!