Peppa falls on the floor when she is laughing, it is known in text language as ROFL roll on floor laughing.
At first it's telling you how you are alone in your life. And then someone comes and tells you how special you are, and it's telling you that you exist and you are important, then it's asking you if you will take the chance to get acknowledged or will you let the chance leave. Your special and this person knows it and is telling you. Your not invisible to me./ or you could say It tells you how even if you feel invisible, there will always be someone who sees you through the crowd. They wouldn't let you fall and they want you to step out of your shell because your beautiful.
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.
here in Australia we call it autumn but in some other countries they call it fall. It is called fall because the leaves FALL of the tree.
Fall.
"Sleep's vision-fall."
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."
One example of figurative language in "The Fall of the House of Usher" is when the narrator describes the house as having "eye-like windows, through which the lights on dark nights absorbed a hue of the fantastic." This metaphor compares the windows to eyes, creating a sense of unease and mystery around the house.
Similes, metaphors, and personifications all fall under the category of figurative language, which is used to create vivid imagery and convey meanings beyond the literal interpretation of words.
A wild cat for a wife would fall under the category of "metaphor" or "figurative language." This phrase likely suggests a partner who is untamed or independent, rather than being taken literally as a domestic cat. It may also imply qualities such as strength, unpredictability, or a fierce spirit in a relationship context.
basant
you eat sphagetti
Legends of the Fall (1994) is rated R for violence, language, and sexuality.
finno-ugric
The tears that fall in times of grief are silent. You cannot hear tears fall.
Similes: "His skin, literally sparkled, like thousands of tiny diamonds were embedded in the surface." pg. 39 paragraph 5"Your hair looks like a haystack."Personification: pg. 24 paragraph 1: "I let my hair fall over my right shoulder, making a dark curtain between us."
There is a little bit of easy figurtive language that you would understand such as the gray water licked there at damp brown grass flattend by the wind ...... its is in ch7 pg 61 2nd parahgraph