I wrote your name in the sand,
But the water washed it away.
I wrote your name in the sky,
But the wind blew it away.
So I wrote your name in my heart,
And forever it will stay.
An extended metaphor is one that stretches longer than a single sentence. A regular metaphor would be something like "She was a rock, unchanging." An extended metaphor would expand on that idea.
An extended metaphor is one that stretches longer than a single sentence. A regular metaphor would be something like "She was a rock, unchanging." An extended metaphor would expand on that idea.
An extended metaphor is a metaphor that is developed throughout a piece of writing or speech. For example, in Shakespeare's "All the world's a stage" speech from "As You Like It," he compares life to a play, with different "acts" representing different stages of life. This extended metaphor helps to convey the idea that life is like a performance with different roles and scenes.
Chillingworth's scrutiny of Dimmesdale is likened to a miner digging for hidden treasure. This extended metaphor highlights Chillingworth's relentless pursuit of uncovering Dimmesdale's secrets and his determination to expose his guilt.
Since these figures of speech are so similar, such that they are both a comparison of two things, it often causes distress. A (extended) metaphor is usually a more simple comparison of objects, such as "A is B." The extension of the metaphor continues this trend by comparing numerous objects in the form of "A is B AND C is D." And extended metaphor can also follow the format of "A is B and C." However, an analogy begins to be more complex in its structure. It begins to compare objects and show the relationship between them. Analogies usually take on the form of "A is to B just as C is to D".
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A metaphor is a figure of speech in which two dissimilar things are used to make a comparison, but an extended metaphor is a comparison that is continuously being made throughout a written work (more commonly in poetry).
An extended metaphor is a metaphor that is started early in the work, usually at the beginning, but it can be added later, that evolves and stretches itself throughout the passage. For example if you were to write a paper, and use a road as a metaphor for the path of life, and you were to develop and use this metaphor throughout the paper then it would be an extended metaphor.
When a metaphor is continued throughout several lines of poetry, it is called an extended metaphor. It deepens the meaning and creates a more vivid image or comparison for the reader.
what is the metaphor in douglass by paul lawrence dunbar?
She uses extended metaphor to give more idea of the text
An extended metaphor is one that stretches longer than a single sentence. A regular metaphor would be something like "She was a rock, unchanging." An extended metaphor would expand on that idea.
An extended metaphor is one that stretches longer than a single sentence. A regular metaphor would be something like "She was a rock, unchanging." An extended metaphor would expand on that idea.
The whole speech is one big extended metaphor. "All the world's a stage . . .", well like a stage anyway. Which is why this is a metaphor.
An extended metaphor is a metaphor that is continued into the next sentence and throughout a section of text. Several poems use extended metaphors and Shakespeare and Frost used it in their pieces.
By using the extended metaphor of Rosa Parks as a warrior
A metaphor is an implied comparison between one thing and another for literary effect. If the comparison dwells on multiple areas of comparison, it is an extended metaphor. "In the night sky of her face, her eyes were stars beneath the windblown rainclouds of her curling hair."