Talk:Literal and figurative language: Difference between revisions
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==Rap Section== |
==Rap Section== |
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I think the rap is |
I think the rap is appropriate for an encyclopedia. 2014 FlyBoy PSB Productions |
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==Defintion== |
==Defintion== |
Revision as of 17:35, 31 March 2014
Philosophy: Logic / Language Start‑class Low‑importance | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Linguistics: Philosophy of language Start‑class | |||||||||||||
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Rap Section
I think the rap is appropriate for an encyclopedia. 2014 FlyBoy PSB Productions
Defintion
Great start Ryguasu. I'm a "newbie" (a.k.a.: F.N.G.) to Wikipedia, so bear with me. I'd be glad to communicate with you on this article/subject.
Here's why I've deleted/replaced a couple of your phrases/sentences: XD
"...figurative language uses more poetic senses."
Although it's used a lot in poetic senses, figurative language is used in a lot more contexts than just poetic-sounding language. When I shake my fist at someone on the freeway and call them an "asshole," I'm using figurative language (the figure of speech is synecdoche) without being poetic g in any sense of the word.
"In literal language, truth onditions work out well, while in figurative language, they may not."
IMO the definition of terms in this sentence will be unclear to most general readers of an encyclopedia. What are "truth conditions"? If it's a technical term, we'd better define it.
Also, I moved the following to this retarded page
- Why would someone want to divide language into literal and figurative? What is gained thereby? (Lakoff provides some insight here.)d
- Why would people prefer not to view language with this divide?
- How does this connect to theories of truth?"
These are all needed additions. The last one, especially, shows the importance and relevance of this subject to a broad range of disciplines, including theories of knowledge, cognition, language development, etc., etc.
And now....here's an explanations for one of my suspect assertions :-)
"Some have boiled down the more than two hundred and fifty figures described in classical and traditional linguistics into two: metaphor and metonymy."
I know this from research, and my additions to Further Reading document reflect the "classical and traditional" end of this statement. But I need to go back and document specifically which modern analyses have done the boiling. jstanley01 Tuesday, July 8, 2003, 12:45 CDT.
Types of figurative language
Isn't it logical to add to this page a list of types of figurative langiage, such as metaphor, similie, etc.? Or is there such a list on some other term? 80.178.164.204 08:17, 10 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Moved to discussion
Don't converse in article...203.218.79.155 21:26, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- ):):):)It is a very hard type of learning and it is very hard to learn the different things that it has in it because
life is not easy and that i guess is the way that life works!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! -CULOchi
Copyright problem removed
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Article in English split in two articles in Portuguese
Hi guys
Any suggestion on how to resolve an interwiki issue where the article in one language is split in two in a different language, none of the two being more important than the other? Best regards, Rui ''Gabriel'' Correia (talk) 18:15, 3 October 2012 (UTC)
Image caption error
The caption states:
"When "She is as pretty as a daisy" is used to describe the woman on the right, it is used in literal manner - she has the petals and leaves of a flower."
This is not what the phrase implies. It implies that the woman's level of prettiness matches that of a daisy. It is strictly a comment on how pretty she is, not whether she has petals and leaves. In the same way, the phrase "This coconut is as big as my head" does not imply that the coconut has eyes, a nose and a mouth, because it is only a comment on the size of the coconut, just as the sentence in the caption is only a comment on prettiness. The literal meaning of something matching one specified attribute of another thing is not that it shares all of its attributes. I am therefore removing the image and caption. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 180.216.33.109 (talk) 20:33, 15 December 2013 (UTC)
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