Idioms, metaphors, similes, and hyperbole are all examples of figurative language that should not be taken literally. These literary devices are used to create imagery, evoke emotions, or convey abstract ideas in a more engaging way.
Jabberwoky
Hyperbola
Purple Patch
figurative language
Figurative language that uses exaggeration to make a point
Language not meant to be take literally is called figurative language.
Figurative language is used in literature to convey meanings beyond the literal interpretation of words. It includes techniques like metaphor, simile, and personification to create imaginative and expressive descriptions.
The words are being used connotatively. A+ figurative luanguage
Language not meant to be taken literally.For example: you are what you eat is not meant to be taken literally, its not like if you eat a hot dog you are a hot dog! haha that would be literal, but luckily that's not possible.figurative language is a simile it is when someone/you compare it to something/someoneexample:she is as tall as a treeit means figures of speech
Language not meant to be taken literally.For example: you are what you eat is not meant to be taken literally, its not like if you eat a hot dog you are a hot dog! haha that would be literal, but luckily that's not possible.figurative language is a simile it is when someone/you compare it to something/someoneexample:she is as tall as a treeit means figures of speech
Figurative language is a way of expressing something in a way that should not be taken literally. For example, you might say that an oxygen atom wants to gain two electrons. Oxygen atoms dotend to gain two electrons when the undergo chemical reactions, but they do not have actual desires or minds. Still, it is quite understandable if you say they want to gain two electrons. That is a figurative statement. It doesn't really have anything to do with the writer's personal life, although nothing prevents a writer from discussing his or her life in figurative terms if he or she so desires.
A figurative phrase or "figurative language" refers to language that is not meant to be taken literally. Examples of figurative language are similes (comparisons using "like" or "as"; he was as tall as a skyscraper or her hair was like golden waves), metaphors (comparisons that do not use "like" or "as"; his breath was fire), hyperboles (exaggerated speech; her suitcase weighed a ton), personification (giving human qualities to an inanimate object; the book jumped off of the desk), and others. For more information and examples, check the link.
The figurative language in "The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost includes symbolism (two roads representing life choices), metaphor (the road as a representation of life's journey), and personification (the roads as if they are having emotions or making choices).
It may be. As much as an aphorism, proverb or casual/small talk. To the best of my knowledge, Figurative Language is a main source of all civilizations as a direct and easy way communication. Japanese, Chinese and even Arabic languages (where even the personal names are figurative) are good examples.
No, just as the Bible or any other "Holy" book should not be taken literally.