SASL Newsletter - Summer 2019 Issue Issue 14 - Summer 2019 | Page 5

Frissora, C. L. (2017). Beyond onomatopoeia. Pittsburgh, PA: RoseDog Books. Gunn, D. P. (1984). Making art strange: A commentary on defamiliarization. The Georgia Review, 38(1), 25-33. Keli, K. M. (2016). A lexical study on the functions of hyperboles in secular Kikamba songs (Unpublished master’s thesis). University of Nairobi, Kenya. Marbury, N. (2005). Nathie: No hand-me-downs [DVD]. Minneapolis, MN: Tactile Mind Press. McCarthy, M., & Carter, R. (2004). “There’s millions of them”: Hyperbole in everyday conversation. Journal of Pragmatics, 36(2), 149-184. McFadden, K. (2012). Hyperbole. In R. Greene, S. Cushman, C. Cavanagh, J. Ramazani, & P. Rouzer (Eds.), The Princeton encyclopedia of poetry and poetics (4 th ed., p. 648). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Miller, M. B. (1991/2010). Live at SMI!: Mary Beth Miller [DVD]. Burtonsville, MD: Sign Media, Inc. Rasinski, T., Zutell, J., & Smith, M. C. (2017). Go figure! Exploring figurative language: Levels 5 – 8. Huntington Beach, CA: Shell Education. Ruban, A. F., & Backiavathy, H. U. (2016). Lexical and phonological – two levels of stylistics: An analytical study of Ted Hughes’ poems. International Journal of Academic Research and Development, 1(3), 59-64. Shklovsky, V. (1917/1965). Art as technique. In L. T. Lemon & M. J. Reiss (Eds.), Russian formalist criticism: Four essays (pp. 3-24). Lincoln, NB: University of Nebraska Press. Smith, J. (1657). The mysterie of rhetorique unvaild. London, UK: E. Cotes for George Everzden. Wall, L., & Potma, S. (2010). Literary and stylistic devices [PowerPoint]. Presented at the Ernest C. Drury School for the Deaf, Milton, Ontario on June 10, 2010. SASL now has 1,394 newsletter subscribers! The Power of ASL 5 Summer 2019 – Issue 14