The thought of injustice makes my heart abhor all forms of discrimination, like a dark cloud overshadowing the beauty of humanity.
# Cyril cultivated roses. (Literal meaning of verb cultivate) # Joe cultivates good relations with his neighbours. (Figurative meaning of verb cultivate) # Anna is a highly cultivated lady. (Past participle used as adjectivemeaning well educated, civilized)
Some good claim sentence starters include: "It is evident that...", "Research suggests that...", "It can be argued that...", or "Studies have shown that...".
"Maayong buntag" is how you say good morning in Visayan language.
"True wisdom is knowing what you don't know."
The sentence is not parallel. To make it parallel, you could write: "The soda jerk was asked to make banana splits quickly, artistically, and with a good attitude."
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It seems perfectly possible to me that some delicious beverage (probably coffee) actually is good to the last drop, in which case this is not figurative language but the literal truth. However, if it is figurative language then it is a form of exaggeration. Perhaps the beverage is good, but not really good to the last drop.
What he did to his wife was abhorrent, she'll never ever forgive him.
Gorillaz, Green Day, TrainIncubus has a really good song "black heart inertia" it has tons of figurative language
Good language should be clear, concise, and precise to effectively communicate its message. It should also be appropriate for the audience and purpose, avoiding jargon or overly complex terms when unnecessary. Grammar, spelling, and punctuation should be used correctly to ensure clarity and understanding.
what about 'no S*it, Sherlock'?
The reson for her keeping them So long was that they were ... good county people
There is an incorrect idiom in the sentence. Idioms are the common, generally very arbitrary ways that we speak our language. For example, in this sentence you have command of a language not in a language. The sentence should read: She has good command of English.
Flames can lick at something. Fire can consumefuel.
One example of figurative language in "Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry" is personification. For instance, when the author describes the thunder as "rolling" and "hearing," she is attributing human characteristics to non-human elements, creating a sense of power and urgency.
Example sentence: i had to return my writing draft to my language arts teacher. that is my sentence
I do not think that the sentence is grammatically correct. The sentence seems ambiguous to me. Is the statement suggesting that "she has good command" of a group of people or animals? Or, is the statement suppose to imply that "she has command" of the English language?