an oxymoron
Ogres are onions- metaphor. Donkey smells as bad as feet- simile. Donkey is a flying talking donkey- personification.
Yes, there is figurative language used in The Alchemyst By Michael Scott. A similie used would be, "Foul, yellow-tinged smoke coiled and dripped from the gray man's gloved hands, spattering onto the wooden floor like dirty liquid." Personification: "Sharp and clean, the smell cut through the clost cellar atmosphere." Metaphor: "Josh's vision became a kaleidoscope of black-and-white still images as the light seared the rods and cones at the back of his eyes." I think this is a hyperbole, but I might be wrong... ;3; "Her teeth were small and perfect, and her face was traced with tiny laugh lines at the corners of her eyes." I think saying that they're perfect is the hyperbole part, but, again, I'm not sure. This is just to name a few. There are TONS more!!
~Kat's poem from the movie "Ten Things I Hate About You" I hate the way you talk to me, And the way you cut your hair. I hate the way you drive my car. I hate it when you stare.I hate your big dumb combat boots, And the way you read my mind. I hate you so much it makes me sick, It even makes me rhyme. I hate the way your always right. I hate it when you lie. I hate the way you make me laugh, Even worse when you make me cry. I hate it when your not around, And the fact that you didn't call. But mostly I hate the way I don't hate you, Not even close, Not even a little bit, Not even at all.
The duration of She Hate Me is 2.3 hours.
It's in One of the most famous Hitchcock's movie: Psycho (1960)Antony Perkins played the role of Norman Bates.The exact naration is: "If you love someone, you don't do that even if you hate them. You understand that I don't hate her, I hate what she's become. I hate the illness."
In Romeo and Juliet who says " o brawling love, o loving hate...o heavy lightness, serious vanity.."
I Hate Myself for Loving You was created in 1988.
you shouldn't hate yourself for loving someone. love is a beautiful feeling never hate yourself it makes you feel confident.
To me it means you can hate somebody but still love them.
A phrase combining two contradictory terms. Oxymorons may be intentional or unintentional. The following speech from William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet uses several oxymorons: Why, then, O brawling love! O loving hate! O anything, of nothing first create!
No I like her =)who could hate Leona ?? she is so sweet and loving :)
I hate you can be translated into Kikuyu language as nigumenete.
try talking to them first ask them what they hate about you and try to improve what they said they hate about you
hate
Joan Jett and the blackhearts
Act 1 of William Shakespeare's Romeo & Juliet is rife with multiple uses of poetic oxymoron's. In the first line "love/loving" is attached to the two oxymoron's of "brawling" and "hate." The oxymoron here is love is assumed to be tranquil rather than confrontation brawls, and hate is its polar opposite. "Feather of lead," is another glaring oxymoron of this metal's heaviness to the seeming weightlessness of a quill.
I will never hate them. Besides, I'll try to show my best to them and even I'll pray for them.