Guilt is like a heavy stone tied around your neck, dragging you down with its weight and making every step feel like a struggle.
Guilt can be metaphorically represented as a heavy weight on one's shoulders, burdening them with a sense of responsibility or remorse for their actions. It can also be likened to a shadow that follows a person, constantly reminding them of their perceived wrongdoings.
A scenario that could symbolize guilt is a character constantly washing their hands to try to rid themselves of an invisible stain, representing their internal feelings of shame and remorse. This act could serve as a visual metaphor for the weight of their guilt that they can't escape from.
The adjective form of guilt is "guilty."
Guilt is an uncountable noun for a state or feeling. It has no singular or plural.
The synonym for guilt free is blameless.
Guilt can be metaphorically represented as a heavy weight on one's shoulders, burdening them with a sense of responsibility or remorse for their actions. It can also be likened to a shadow that follows a person, constantly reminding them of their perceived wrongdoings.
The taste of blood in this dream is a powerful metaphor representing your feelings of guilt and responsibility.
"Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean" The use of "hands" here is of course a synecdoche. "Blood" is used as a metaphor for guilt. "Bury their parents' strife" Burying is a metaphor for disposing of anything, even a disagreement.
His sickness is primarily a metaphor for his inner/ moral sickness due to his sin. But it is also presumably caused by the stress and self torment of his guilt.
Macbeth says his mind is full of scorpions when he is contemplating the consequences of his actions and the guilt he feels for his crimes. This metaphor illustrates the intense torment and inner turmoil he is experiencing.
it is a metaphor, much like 'alot on your plate', meaning you have alot of things going on at the moment. also bearing the burden of guilt or responsibility for one's actions (synonymous with 'blood on your head').
Its a metaphor
It is a metaphor.
it is neither, it is personification
I believe that you have your terms confused. It is a PLEAof Guilt - not a motion of guilt.
"He was a lion in the fight" is a metaphor.
Implied metaphor is when it gives you the metaphor but doesn't tell what the subject is. A regular metaphor tells you the subject of it.