An exaggeration poem is a poem where you choose a certain topic, so in this case it is a pepper. Then you have to exaggerate as much as you can, about that topic.
For example...
I Ate a Spicy Pepper
I ate a spicy pepper
From my brother on a dare.
The pepper caught my head on fire
And burned off all my hair.
My mouth erupted lava
And my tongue began to melt.
My ears were shooting jets of steam.
At least that's how they felt.
I ricocheted around the room.
I ran across the ceiling.
I dove right in the freezer
To relieve the burning feeling.
I drank a thousand soda pops
And chewed a ton of ice
To try to stop the scorching
Of that spicy pepper's spice.
At last, the flames extinguished,
I admitted to my brother,
"That pepper was the best one yet.
May I please have another?"
The word in the poem that means to swarm is "teem."
That's an exaggeration of the truth!
hyperbole is something that has an exaggeration in it like tons of money
The story was an exaggeration of what actually happened. His exaggeration of what to expect left them all disappointed.
An exact word-for-word meaning without exaggeration means providing a literal interpretation of the words spoken or written, without adding any additional emphasis or embellishment. It involves sticking strictly to the precise wording and intention of the original statement.
The Swedish opposite of 'exaggeration' is 'underdrift.' In english; 'understatement'.
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Since you didn't tell us WHICH poem you're talking about, nobody can answer the question for you.
A quatorzain is a 14-line poem. The word "quatorzain" itself means a poem with 14 lines.
A hyperbole is a figure of speech where exaggeration is used for emphasis or effect. In the poem "Daffodils" by William Wordsworth, "A host, of golden daffodils; . . . Continuous as the stars that shine and twinkle on the Milky Way" -- the use of the number of daffodis compared to the stars of the Milky Way is an exaggeration.
I'm not really sure but I think it is cringing
hyperbole