No, hyperbole is an exaggeration. "Raining hard enough to wash the town away" would be hyperbole. "Raining cats and dogs" is an idiom because it makes no sense when you translate it literally.
I would say it is more of an idiom since idioms usually don't make sense in their literal form. We know that literal cats and dogs don't fall out of the sky when it is raining hard.
LITERAL? The LITERAL meaning is that cats and dogs are falling out of the sky.
No, it's an idiom.
Language that goes beyond the ordinary meaning of words. Figurative language is different from literal language in that the former uses all kinds of techniques including metaphor, simile, and so on to get its message across whilst the latter (literal) uses straightforward factual language. Figurative speech is desirable for novel writing because it is more interesting but literal is more appropriate in an official document and in academic writing. Non-literal or figurative language refers to words, and groups of words, that exaggerate or alter the usual meanings of the component words.
Trust me, that dog is going down.
Have you've ever asked yourself: What is the difference between a funny story and a biography. Words. The choice of words is what makes the reader want to read. Look at the following sentences and tell me which is better:1) It was a rainy day. I was bored, depressed, and wanted to go outside to play like a regular being should, but here I was stuck under this roof reading. I wanted to go outside but it seemed to be raining for forever.2) It was raining cats and dogs today! I wanted to go out side so much. The playing equipment was calling me, the park was longing for me, my friends were beckoning me, but here I was, a dog stuck on a leash. Can't time just fly by like it usually does when I am having a good time?I put in bold all of the text that had figurative language in it. My examples are probably not that good.... I was quickly thinking of an example, but you probably picked example number two as being more engaging.Figurative language should be fun, exciting, and creative. It should be the reason why the paper you are writing has life in the first place (opinion). When you don't want something to be obvious, like saying it is raining hard, you use figurative language to make someone think about the true meaning.
The answer to that question is no. It's no because a metaphor is an compairson that says one thing is another and an idiom is an expression that says one thaing but means something quite different ( It's raining cats and dogs, which means it's raining heavily). The answer to that question is no. It's no because a metaphor is an compairson that says one thing is another and an idiom is an expression that says one thaing but means something quite different ( It's raining cats and dogs, which means it's raining heavily).
The dogs win in the movie cats and dogs.
It means to use other words instead of your words to express what you are saying. For Example: Its raining cats and dogs. This is figurative language because it expresses that it is raining very hard.
It means to use other words instead of your words to express what you are saying. For Example: Its raining cats and dogs. This is figurative language because it expresses that it is raining very hard.
No! 'its raining cats and dogs' is an Idiom.
"It's raining cats and dogs" is an idiom.
The phrase "it's raining cats and dogs!" is hyperbole.
Raining cats and dogs mean that it's raining very hard
There is an expression - "raining cats and dogs". This does not mean that cats and/or dogs are literally falling from the sky, it simply means that it is raining very hard.
under what headword would you find the idiom raining cats and dogs?
Its raining cats and dogs!
It is raining heavily
In olden times people threw rubbish into the street. In amongst the rubbish would be cats and dogs which would be washed along the street during heavy rain. Hence raining cats and dogs. Of course, they are not literally raining from above!
Its raining cats and dogs