This symposium includes research on children’s comprehension and production of figurative language, including metaphor, simile, and allegory. Dent introduces the symposium, defining terms (topic, vehicle, ground) and noting recent emphases on cognitive and pragmatic aspects of figurative language. In the first study, Vosniadou and Ortony showed that 6-year-olds were better able to act out than paraphrase metaphorical sentences. In the second study, Dent and Ledbetter showed 5-, 7-, and 10-year-olds filmed scenes that could be paired literally or metaphorically. Metaphoric pairings increased with age, and were more frequent for moving than stationary objects. Subsequently, metaphors based on the films were better comprehended than unrelated metaphors. In the third study, Windmueller et al. asked 6-, 8-, 10-, and 12-year-olds to match allegorical stories to their literal referents and metaphorical topics to their appropriate vehicles. The number of correct matches increased with age. Children were able to explain allegories before they could explain analogous metaphors. In a concluding discussion, Verbrugge sets forth four conclusions two methodological, two developmental – that are supported by the research findings.