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Alliteration
It seems perfectly possible to me that some delicious beverage (probably coffee) actually is good to the last drop, in which case this is not figurative language but the literal truth. However, if it is figurative language then it is a form of exaggeration. Perhaps the beverage is good, but not really good to the last drop.
form of the poem crossing the bar
The form of figurative language that makes a direct comparison stating that something is something else is called a
HyperBole
Figurative language.
It is not figurative. It is completely literal.
Alliteration
It seems perfectly possible to me that some delicious beverage (probably coffee) actually is good to the last drop, in which case this is not figurative language but the literal truth. However, if it is figurative language then it is a form of exaggeration. Perhaps the beverage is good, but not really good to the last drop.
form of the poem crossing the bar
The form of figurative language that makes a direct comparison stating that something is something else is called a
"Porcupines" is already a plural noun. The singular form is porcupine. A group of porcupines is commonly referred to as a "prickle" of porcupines.
simile i think
because poetry and figurative language are a form of language arts and both those things are part of art so thts bascally how they connect
In "Thank You, Ma'am," the phrase "Thank you, ma'am" is a form of figurative language known as irony. This is because Roger thanks Mrs. Jones not only for her kindness and generosity but also for teaching him an important lesson about honesty and respect.
HyperBole
figure of speech: is a rhetorical device that achieves a special effect by using words in distinctive ways. Figurative language is a word or phrase that departs from everyday literal language for the sake of comparison, emphasis, clarity, or freshness. These two literary terms are the same thing. They're synonyms.