Hyperbole In English Language Examples

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According to Oxford English Dictionary, Hyperbole is a kind of figure of speech consisting in exaggerated or extravagant statement used to express strong feeling or produce a strong impression, and not intended to be understood literally, for example:

“Hamlet, I loved Ophelia: forty thousand brothers could not, with all their quantity of love, make up my sum.” (Hamlet)
Ten thousand saw I at a glance, Tossing their heads in a sprightly dance. (The Daffodils) William Wordsworth
And I will come again, my love, though it were ten thousand miles. (Robert Burns: A Red, Red Rose) (亲爱的,我一定要回来,哪怕是万水千山,千里迢迢。)
If I knock over a vase and it is shattered into a thousand pieces,Fred puts it together again in such a way that only an expert would see the …show more content…

As is recorded in Merriam Webster, metaphor refers to one thing by mentioning another for rhetorical effect. English numerals for metaphorical effect are usually extended into the connotation related to the meaning of the objects or their features, making the language vivifying and splendid. Strictly speaking, antithesis, metonym and simile are all types of metaphor. One of the most commonly-used examples of a metaphor in English Literature is "All the world is a stage." Numerals commonly used for rhetorical purpose are a set of words that indicate nothing, namely, zero, naught, cipher, nil. For …show more content…

It is (Catch-22) is a novel published in 1961 by Joseph Heller. Later, people "Catch-22" to indicate the dilemma whose answer is still in question. Chris Weller, the university 's women 's basketball team coach, used the word "Catch-22" when she recollected a match played by his woman club. “The girls served in the “honor teams, she recalled, with just a trace of scorn,” “You could play six games a year. I asked why and they had no argument. It was a Catch-22, You had no interest so you couldn 't have a gym so you had no