A hyperbole is a statement of extreme exaggeration to show emphasis.
boycotts, strikes &demonstrations
One can get exaggerations online using an online dictionary. Exaggerations are also known as hyperbole's. Exaggerations are part of figurative language.
Some examples of extreme exaggeration are: - I've answered this a thousand times. - My boyfriend is like twelve feet tall. - In the 40's? That's freezing! - Hot as hell - Making a mountain out of a molehill - As easy as taking candy from a baby
SIMILIES IS ONE METAPHOR IS ANOTHER EXAGGERATION IS MY FAVORITE AND DID U KNOW THAT EXAGGERATIONS ARE MEANT TO MAKE PEOPLE LAUGH AND THATS ALL I KNOW THANK YOU ALL
In general a metaphor is just a way to think about a subject from a different angle, or to find a vivid way of expressing some idea, however, metaphor is often an exaggeration. If you say, for example, that some obese person is a whale, that is a metaphor and also an exaggeration since even the most obese person does not weigh as much as a whale.
In general a metaphor is just a way to think about a subject from a different angle, or to find a vivid way of expressing some idea, however, metaphor is often an exaggeration. If you say, for example, that some obese person is a whale, that is a metaphor and also an exaggeration since even the most obese person does not weigh as much as a whale.
It depends on what his priors are. Some States have the 3 strikes rule.
Air strikes? The Department of Defense. Strikes, as in labor strikes? No government department is responsible for these, although the Department of Labor can have some influence over them. But the strikes themselves are the responsibility of the unions involved, and the businesses.
In "Ode To Mi Gato" by Gary Soto, some examples of literary devices are: Simile: "Like a plush motorboat, / Mi Gato zooms." Metaphor: "His tail is a letter curling to a question." Alliteration: "black ears that twitch when / He sleeps" Personification: "He stares back, / He makes bread with those feet" Exaggeration is not as prominent in this poem.
The word 'strikes' is a noun, not a pronoun.An antecedent is the noun or pronoun that a pronoun replaces.Example: When Henry comes home he reads the paper. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the antecedent noun 'Henry')The word 'strikes' is the plural form of the noun 'strike', or the third person, singular, present of the verb 'to strike' (George strikes out again.)The pronouns that take the place of the plural noun 'strikes' are they as a subject and them as an object in a sentence.Examples:During the Great Depression, strikes were the only power that labor had. They were used to protect jobs and wages, although is was sometimes risky to participate in them. (the noun 'strikes' is the antecedent)You and I can plan some strikes if we work together. (the pronoun 'we' takes the place of the antecedent pronouns 'you and I')
When light energy strikes a leaf, some of it is absorbed by pigments in the leaf for photosynthesis, some is reflected, and some is transmitted through the leaf. The absorbed light energy is converted into chemical energy by the leaf for use in metabolic processes.