Metaphorical language--comprising most commonly and
--allows a writer to identify one thing with another in order to show how
the first thing mentioned is similar to the second thing. For example, a football player might
be described as "a lion" on the field or as having played "like a lion in today's
game." In the first example, the writer is using a metaphor to compare
the player to a lion and, in the second, a simile, which is a comparison
using the words "like" or "as." In both cases, the writer is comparing the
football to a powerful animal in the hope of evoking an image (the power of a lion) that helps
the reader understand the power of the football player.
In " ," as
Irving is...
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