personification
To do one's best
The phrase "we had to wait forever" uses hyperbole, which is a form of figurative language that exaggerates for emphasis or effect. It does not mean literally waiting an infinite amount of time but emphasizes the feeling of an excessively long wait. This exaggeration helps convey the speaker's frustration or impatience.
Language not meant to be taken literally.For example: you are what you eat is not meant to be taken literally, its not like if you eat a hot dog you are a hot dog! haha that would be literal, but luckily that's not possible.figurative language is a simile it is when someone/you compare it to something/someoneexample:she is as tall as a treeit means figures of speech
Food- or in Italian it means goodbye. ---------------- There are complex meanings depending on context. see related link below
it helps when capulet was sad
Figurative language is language that refers or implies or flat-out doesn't mean what it seems to mean. "Kicked the bucket" is figurative language for "died."Literal language means exactly what it looks like.
What does concrete imagery mean?
To do one's best
figurative.
"In" is one of the most used prepositions in the English language, with a host of figurative meanings. Its literal use is to describe something coated or surrounded or covered with something else. You are in the house; the house surrounds you. You are in your clothes; your clothes cover you.
It meant that Lara didn't actually turn into a dragon but she was fierce like a dragon. Figurative language means that it doesn't actually happen.
In "Rumble Fish," figurative language can be found throughout the novel, including metaphors, similes, and personification. For example, when Rusty-James describes the Fish as “a mean bastard,” it is a metaphor comparing the fish to a violent person. This figurative language helps create vivid imagery and add depth to the characters and themes in the story.
No. Figurative language is essentially descriptive language using comparisons. Similes and metaphors fall under this category. For example, "Her anger boiled over like a pot of rice." Figures of speech are just idioms, or phrases that don't mean what they say literally. Like "racking your brains" or "We'll play it by ear" or "It's a piece of cake."
Figurative language is any kind of language where the words do not mean precisely (literally) what they say. Shakespeare's Sonnet 116 is not an obvious sonnet to choose for examples of figurative language (for a number of reasons): but when Shakespeare says that he does not want to 'admit impediment' to Love, that is an example of figurative language. He does not literally mean that he worries that Love might stumble over something, he just says that he is not going to criticise true love in any way. Similarly, later, when he calls love a 'star to every wandering bark' he does not literally mean that Love appears in the night sky; he means that love is how we navigate our lives - so this is also figurative language. There is more figurative language in this sonnet, but now that you know what you are looking for - you will probably be able to find your own.
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.
If you mean this excerpt from "Facing It" ...No Tears. I'm stone. I'm flesh. My clouded reflection eyes me Then the answer is: His reflection seems to be apart of the war memorial wall. (APEX) !/
It means that it goes over the top of your head, if you define it literally. If you mean in figurative language, it means that you did not understand whatever it was - it was beyond your understanding.