figürsel

listen to the pronunciation of figürsel
Türkisch - Englisch
figurative
Metaphorical or tropical, as opposed to literal; using figures; as of the use of "cats and dogs" in the phrase "It's raining cats and dogs"
With many figures of speech
Metaphorically so called
{a} typical, metaphorical, allusive
Representing by a figure, or by resemblance; typical; representative
usually applied to language that uses figures of speech Figurative language heightens meaning by implicitly or explicitly representing something in terms of some other thing, the assumption being that the "other thing" will be more familiar to the reader
(used of the meanings of words or text) not literal; using figures of speech; "figurative language
(used of the meanings of words or text) not literal; using figures of speech; "figurative language"
Not literal
Pertaining to representation of form or figure in art
Figurative language tries to explain the unfamiliar using the familiar For example, saying there is a hole in the ozone layer is figurative since a good percent of original ozone still remains The speaker or writer assumes that the audience is less likely to understand the significance or magnitude of a decrease in parts per million ozone and so uses hole as a figure of speech Metaphors and similes (the evening is spread out against the sky like a patient etherized upon a table) are figurative Allegories are elaborately figurative
Metaphorical, as opposed to literal, a form of speech in which figures of speech are applied and there is an intention for the reader to understand a deeper meaning than the face-value of the words. Also known as "reading between the lines
consisting of or forming human or animal figures; "a figural design"; "the figurative art of the humanistic tradition"- Herbert Read
art that represents a human, animal or object's form by means of a symbol or figure
Word images that cannot be interpreted literally; types of figurative language include similes ("cute as a button"), metaphors (he was a lion in battle"), idioms ("start from scratch"), personification ("the puppy was indignant"), and hyperbole ("I'm so hungry I could eat a horse")
Emblematic
If you use a word or expression in a figurative sense, you use it with a more abstract or imaginative meaning than its ordinary literal one. an event that will change your route -- in both the literal and figurative sense. literal + figuratively fig·ura·tive·ly Europe, with Germany literally and figuratively at its centre, is still at the start of a remarkable transformation
{s} metaphorical; allegorical; illustrative; richly imaginative; symbolic; emblematic
figürsel
Favoriten