This is a personification because you cant actually fire it but it describes the way you want to feel about something.
Her shoes made sounds like fire crackers
Personification! It is personification because the fire is given human-like qualities. Human-like quality = cheerful.
Yes, the noun 'fire' is a common noun, a general word for the flame, light, and heat produced by combustion; a general word for eagerness and enthusiasm; a general word for the shot from a gun or cannon.The word 'fire' is also a verb: fire, fires, firing, fired.
The noun 'fire' (fires) is a singular, common, concrete noun, as a word the light and heat produced by combustion; the discharge of a gun; a word for a thing. The noun 'fire' is an uncountable, common, abstract noun as a word for enthusiasm or eagerness. The word 'fire' also functions as a verb: fire, fires, firing, fired.
The snow was as thick as a wool blanket over the frozen ground: Simile
Lungs were on fire
Literal language is language that conveys the exact meaning of the words used, while figurative language uses words to create a different effect, often conveying a deeper or more imaginative meaning. Literal language is straightforward and factual, while figurative language relies on comparisons, exaggerations, or associations to convey meaning.
yes there are alot like when he said he would tie her to the bed and set the house on fire
Flames can lick at something. Fire can consumefuel.
To not talk literally in a sentence. example of a literal sentence: go away. <--to change that to a figurative sentence you would say: go take a hike you wouldn't want the person to actually go into the mountains and explore would you?
Her shoes made sounds like fire crackers
what are some figurative language examples in call it courage
Idiom
Fire means zeal, or enthusiasm.
Some figurative language examples for the book "Firegirl" could include similes like "her laughter was like a ray of sunshine" or metaphors such as "her emotions were a raging wildfire." Personification could also be used: "the flames of her past danced in her eyes."
Personification! It is personification because the fire is given human-like qualities. Human-like quality = cheerful.
A figurative phrase or "figurative language" refers to language that is not meant to be taken literally. Examples of figurative language are similes (comparisons using "like" or "as"; he was as tall as a skyscraper or her hair was like golden waves), metaphors (comparisons that do not use "like" or "as"; his breath was fire), hyperboles (exaggerated speech; her suitcase weighed a ton), personification (giving human qualities to an inanimate object; the book jumped off of the desk), and others. For more information and examples, check the link.