A metaphor says something else, for example when an excessive funeral director is described as a vulture. Mr. Meyer said, "Rhetoric is indirect, but their purpose is not to obscure our understanding of what they are explaining, but to clarify." . Text: "Dinner strongly expresses the anger of the waiter." Metaphor: "Dinner jumped out of the table and shouted to the waiter." It created a violent angry picture by comparing dinner with wild animals So the figurative statement was clearer.
During the Renaissance scholars carefully nominated and classified the speech. For example, Henry Peacham is listing 184 different speeches in his "eloquent garden" (1577). In the book written by Professor Robert DiYanni "Literature - Novels, Poetry, Theater, Prose Prose Reading" as follows. For simplicity, this article divides numbers between schemes and escapes, but does not subdivide them further (eg, "no number"). In each category, words are listed in alphabetical order. Most entries are linked to pages that provide more detailed descriptions and related examples, but for convenience, short entries are given here. Some of the listed items can be thought of as rhetorical devices, and it is similar in many ways
Language is a literary device whose language is used in a rare or "image" way to create style effects. Speech diagrams can be divided into two broad categories. It is a language that is interpreted in ordinary words (metaphor, metaphor, exaggeration etc) and written in ordinary arrangement and pattern. (Eg rhyme, ellipsis, opposite words). There is much confusion about the difference between the terms "word" and "metaphorical language". Most of the confusion stems from the fact that different people use a "figurative language" and mean a bit different. The two most common (and most acceptable) definitions of figurative languages are: