Metaphor
Metaphor
A Metaphor is a figure of speech in which a word or phrase is used in place of another to suggest a likeness or analogy between them. A metaphor is the opposite of a simile though both are used as comparisons. A simile will often contain the words like, as, as if, or as though. A metaphor does not.
Etymology
From Greek metaphoric - to transfer, meta- + pherein - to bear
Types
dead metaphors- a word or phrase that has lost its metaphoric strength by being used to often.
mixed metaphor- a figure of speech combining inconsistent or odd metaphors.
Example
The poem, The Bight by Elizabeth Bishop, quotes “Pelicans crash into this peculiar gas unnecessarily hard, it seems to me, like pickaxes, rarely coming up with anything to show for it, and going off with humorous elbowings”. Bishop paints the image of pelicans coming out of the water with the metaphor “humorous elbowings”. (Charters)
Works cited
“Metaphor.” Def.1a. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary. 7th ed. 1977.
"metaphor." Encyclopedia Britannica. 2006. Encyclopedia Britannica Premium Service. 14 Feb. 2006 <http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9052289>.
Ann Charters and Samuel Charters. Literature and Its Writers: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama. Boston: Bedford, 1997. 904-906.