Skip to main content

Questions tagged [figures-of-speech]

A figure of speech is non-literal language in the form of a single word or phrase.

1 vote
2 answers
71 views

What is the phrase to describe when a person makes comment to indirectly imply opinion

Implicating, non direct, advice, side comment, snide remark, to share information without directing to the person it is meant for, an underhanded comment
Angela Andreason's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
47 views

Which figure of speech is used in 'pull of dna'?

Adoptive motherhood is born of a psychical bond that is so overpowering that it completely eclipses all received notions about ‘blood relation’, ‘pull of DNA’, etc.
divya's user avatar
  • 11
0 votes
2 answers
105 views

Would this be a metaphor?

So there is an incident where someone was vacationing in Scotland. This other person asks her if she is in Scotland. The one vacationing says "yes". The person's response is "Take as ...
Alyson's user avatar
  • 1
1 vote
1 answer
69 views

What is the term/phrase in academic English Literature given to idioms/figure-of-speech/proverbs/narratives that are oxymorons/self-contradictory? [closed]

Unless the employer stuffs my mouth with gold until I gag, I will Not work for them. What is the term/phrase in academic English Literature given to idioms/figure-of-speech/proverbs/narratives that ...
crazyTech's user avatar
  • 265
0 votes
0 answers
72 views

Can last be a synonym for least?

My thought process is that I can be first among equals but can I also be last among equals and can this be extended to just be a general the best and the worst. That would mean I am the first and you ...
Armin's user avatar
  • 101
1 vote
1 answer
44 views

Technical term for parts of a metaphor [duplicate]

What's the technical term for the "argument" of a metaphor? For example: The world is a vampire, set to drain Bullet with Butterfly Wings, Smashing Pumpkins (1995). "Vampire" is ...
Tevildo's user avatar
  • 1,303
0 votes
2 answers
56 views

Word, term or phrase for idioms, proverbs, figure-of-speech that lose their true meaning due to being from a different time or due to translation? [duplicate]

In various language literature, there could be idioms, proverbs, figure-of-speech that lose their true meaning because it meant something in a different time period Or it was being translated from ...
crazyTech's user avatar
  • 265
0 votes
5 answers
20 views

What adjective can designate an inventory item that is unwanted and slotted for disposal for a non-specific reason (not damaged, obsolete, extra)?

I am looking for an adjective to describe drums at a manufacturing facility and that have been deemed unwanted and planned to be scrapped, recycled or disposed in some way. They may be empty, have ...
user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
110 views

Is the phrase "a brute of a husband" a figure of speech?

I came across the phrase "A BRUTE OF A HUSBAND". I would normally use 'a brute husband', and this construction seems interesting to me. However, I don't know how to search for more phrases ...
Ziad El Hachem's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
399 views

Figure of speech for repetition of words in the middle of successive phrases, sentences or verses

I know Anaphora is repetition of a word or expression at the beginning of successive phrases, clauses, sentences, or verses and Epistrophe is repetition of a word or expression at the end of ...
Solitary Solus's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
355 views

What is the term for using a famous person's name to describe another person? [duplicate]

Names of exceptional people are sometimes used colloquially to describe other people. The most prominent example is referring to someone ironically as "Einstein" or "an Einstein," ...
Paris Geis's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
34 views

Help me identify the literary device (if any)

Is there a literary device hidden in the following sentence? The officer wheels me around I was thinking if it could be a hyperbole or a trope opposite to personification, because a person does not ...
Dan93's user avatar
  • 31
0 votes
1 answer
56 views

Literary phrasing (gold-pressed)

Gold pressed temptress of silence Let the morning call unanswered And ransom the day off Song: Good Love, by Zola Blood What exactly is gold pressed? A fictional reference or some metalsmith ...
Peter's user avatar
  • 101
-1 votes
2 answers
651 views

A metaphor for something that changes for a narrative about my name

I am writing a narrative for a class and I have been stuck on metaphors for a specific part! My name has changed quite a few times throughout my life and I wanted to highlight this through use of ...
user465258's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
90 views

Split-word phenomenon [duplicate]

There's a phenomenon I've encountered occasionally of splitting a word for emphasis: Do I want to get a kebab? Abso-bloomin'-lutely! Being "absolutely" given the enhancement of the ...
Jiminy Cricket.'s user avatar

15 30 50 per page
1
2 3 4 5
15