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Figurative
What type of figurative language is Horton's quote, "I'm light as a feather"?
Your question is incoherent.
Figurative language that shows things as having the same meaning
ship trip
Your question presupposes that there is one "literal meaning" to the word in question whereas there are a number of "figurative meanings". Where there are multiple meanings they can be read differently. It doesn't matter whether they are literal or figurative; it is quite possible for two literal meanings of the same word to be read differently. E.g. "I know the ship has a bow, but I don't know who it was that tied it."Figurative. ._.
of Bathe
of Seed
Actually, figurative language uses words in a non-literal way to create a deeper or more unique meaning. It includes devices like simile, metaphor, and personification, which help convey abstract ideas or emotions in a more creative or vivid manner.
symbolic
The type of figurative language being used here is metaphor. The comparison between a physical ambush in the jungle and the past constantly surprising or overwhelming the narrator is a metaphorical way of expressing that idea.
This type of figurative language is called metaphor. In this case, the past is being compared to an ambush, creating a vivid image of how unexpected and intrusive memories from the past can affect the narrator.