* blood ran cold
* break a leg
* bakers dozen
*a drop in the bucket
*a piece of cake
*apple of my eye
Some common figures of speech include simile (comparing two things using "like" or "as"), metaphor (saying one thing is another), alliteration (repetition of initial consonant sounds), and hyperbole (exaggeration for emphasis).
* blood ran cold
* break a leg
* bakers dozen
*a drop in the bucket
*a piece of cake
*apple of my eye
i they cry!
i cry a river of tears;
but it's look like weird
the candles cry with a hot tears;
i cant embrace it,cause of its tears.
physics please be good to me.what figure of speech is this?
There are a number of different figures of speech. Some of these include hyperbole, simile, and metaphor. An example of hyperbole would be, "I'm so hungry I could eat a horse."
Some examples of figure of speech include time is money, heart of stone, it cost a billion and so much more. A figure of speech is using a phrase in a different way than the literal meaning.
Robert Frost's "The Road Not Taken"
Maya Angelou's "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings."
Langston Hughes' "Harlem (Dream Deferred)"
simile.. metaphor.. metonymy.. irony.. synecdoche.. personification.. hyperbole.. oxymoron.. litotes.. anthimeria.. paradox.. metalepsis
Figure of speech is the use of word or phrase to interpret a certain idea. The second figure of speech means, continuing the same sentence or making a comparison with the idea in the previous sentence.
Simile: comparing two unlike things using "like" or "as" (e.g. "as brave as a lion"). Metaphor: direct comparison between two unlike things (e.g. "time is a thief"). Personification: giving human qualities to something non-human (e.g. "the sun smiled down on us"). Hyperbole: exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally (e.g. "I've told you a million times"). Alliteration: repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words (e.g. "peter piper picked a peck of pickled peppers"). Onomatopoeia: words that imitate sounds (e.g. "buzz," "crash"). Oxymoron: putting two contradictory words together (e.g. "bittersweet," "deafening silence"). Irony: words used to convey a meaning that is opposite of the literal meaning (e.g. a fire station burning down).
A figure of speech
Do you mean "simile"? a figure of speech that expresses a resemblance between things of different kinds (usually formed with `like' or `as')
figure of speech according to categories
The Tagalog term for "figure of speech" is "larawang-diwa."
figure of speech is a kind of a style. the credit of this is point of figure.
They are verbs
Simile
The figure of speech in the first line is Simile.
figure of speech
The six figure of speech are:SimileMethaporPersonificationHyperboleOnomatopiaIronyBY: JULIA GONZALES AND DIANE MERCADER