The metaphor bricks got fit in the wall where it was crumbly before means that the point is/comes out so clear meaning that it's clearer/ easy to under stand. The point was clear/easy to figure out.
Like some bricks got fit into the wall where it was crumbly before.
This metaphor means that small efforts or contributions can strengthen a weak or unstable situation, just like adding bricks to reinforce a crumbling wall. It implies that each small action, no matter how insignificant it may seem, can make a significant impact when combined with others towards a common goal.
All cocaine bricks, hint... he sells cocaine.
In the Leaky Couldron, if you mean the bricks to enter Diagon Alley.
An elaborate metaphor is also called a sustained metaphor. It is when a metaphor is referred to multiple times throughout a piece by the author.
This dream could be a metaphor expressing your feeling of surprise at some recent and sudden revelation. It is a literal illustration of the common expression "it just hit me," or "it hit me like a ton of bricks." In other words, you received surprising information or suddenly understood something in a way that had not occurred to you before.
i believe it's a metaphor!
It's basically a metaphor for you shouldn't leave someone before, lets say, making amends for a fight you might have had with them.
"Bricks, all white bricks" He is implying dope, cocaine, or drugs in general. Gucci mane in this song is talking about cocaine when he references "white bricks".
in building and bricks
The metaphor "a lock without a key" typically signifies something incomplete, unable to be solved, or a situation lacking resolution. It suggests that there is a missing piece or solution needed to resolve a problem or understand a situation fully.
She is trying to determine what is going on in the situation before she makes a decision. This is a metaphor comparing the person to an animal sniffing around for scents.
Metaphor
A plowshare (or ploughshare outside the US) is the part of a plow (plough) which cuts the soil before turning it over. In expressions like "beating swords into plowshares" the sword is a metaphor for(symbolises) war and the plowshare is a metaphor for peace.