What is a Metaphor? | Definition & Examples (2024)

What is a Metaphor? Transcript (English & Spanish Subtitles Available in Video. Click HERE for Spanish Transcript)

By Tim Jensen, Oregon State University Associate Professor of Rhetoric and Department Chair

20 May 2019

Metaphor is a comparison between two things that are otherwise unrelated.

With metaphor, the qualities of one thing are figuratively carried over to another. When I say, “Dude, I’m drowning in work,” I’m using qualities associated with one thing—the urgency and helplessness of drowning—to convey meaning for another thing—the work I’ve got to do.

Metaphors are everywhere: He’s a couch potato. She’s got a heart of gold. That party was the bomb. Money is the root of all evil.

Swear words and slang are often metaphorical. Take bullsh** for example.

Wait, can I say bullsh**?

Why not? It’s a perfect example of how metaphors are everywhere.

No? Well, that’s bullsh**.

By bringing two unrelated elements into a comparison, metaphors can add creativity and clarity to writing and everyday speech, allowing us to see things from different angles and in a new light. Take this sentence by H.P. Lovecraft, which uses vivid imagery to suggest the limits of our knowledge: “We live on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and it was not meant that we should voyage far.”

In rhetorical and literary analysis, we often look at how authors use metaphors in ways that go beyond short phrases. An extended metaphor is one that goes on for several sentences. If a metaphor is extended across an entire piece of writing, it’s called a controlling metaphor.

In the novel Invisible Man, for example, Ralph Ellison extends the metaphor of invisibility to describe how black men and women are often overlooked in American society, pushed to the margins and into the shadows.

So, metaphors aren’t just some stylistic flourish that we use at the sentence level. In fact, according to George Lakoff and Mark Johnson, our very thought—the conceptual systems we use to think and act—are fundamentally metaphorical. They’re intrinsic to thinking, which is why it’s wise to pay attention to how they’re used.

Metaphors: Equipment for living. Which is a metaphor… okay, I’ll stop now.

Want to cite this?

MLA Citation: Jensen, Tim. "What is a Metaphor?" Oregon State Guide to English Literary Terms, 20 May 2019, Oregon State University, https://liberalarts.oregonstate.edu/wlf/what-metaphor. Accessed [insert date].

Further Resources for Teachers & Students:

For an extended discussion of the two components of a metaphorical comparison, see our "What are Vehicles and Tenors?" lesson.

For a discussion of the differences between simile and metaphor, see our "What is a Simile?" lesson.

Charlotte Perkins Gilman's short story "The Yellow Wallpaper" offers students many opportunities to identify metaphors (and metonyms) in its portrayal of the confined narrator. Once students have identified these metaphors, they could begin to analyze why the narrator might find it easier to think metaphorically about her situation rather than express it directly.

Interested in more video lessons? View the full series:

The Oregon State Guide to English Literary Terms

What is a Metaphor? | Definition & Examples (2024)

FAQs

What is a Metaphor? | Definition & Examples? ›

A metaphor is a figure of speech that implicitly compares two unrelated things, typically by stating that one thing is another (e.g., “that chef is a magician”). Metaphors can be used to create vivid imagery, exaggerate a characteristic or action, or express a complex idea.

What is the 5 example of metaphor? ›

Metaphors are everywhere: He's a couch potato. She's got a heart of gold. That party was the bomb. Money is the root of all evil.

What is a metaphor in simple words? ›

A metaphor is a figure of speech that is used to make a comparison, but in a way different from a simile. Instead, it makes the description of an object look as if it was literally true. In other words, it can be said that a metaphor is an implied comparison.

How can you identify a metaphor? ›

A metaphor is a figure of speech that describes an object or action in a way that isn't literally true, but helps explain an idea or make a comparison. Here are the basics: A metaphor states that one thing is another thing.

What is the difference between a simile and a metaphor? ›

A simile is a figure of speech that compares two otherwise dissimilar things, often introduced by the words like or as ('you are like a summer's day'). A metaphor is when a word is used in place of another to suggest a likeness ('you are a summer's day').

What are 3 good metaphors? ›

Metaphor examples for kids
  • Her tears were a river flowing down her cheeks.
  • The classroom was a zoo.
  • He is a night owl.
  • Mario is a chicken.
  • Her eyes were fireflies.
Jan 12, 2021

What are 10 famous metaphors? ›

Other examples of common metaphors are “night owl”, “cold feet”, “beat a dead horse”, “early bird”, “couch potato”, “eyes were fireflies”, “apple of my eye”, “heart of stone”, “heart of a lion”, “roller coaster of emotions”, and “heart of gold.”

What is the best way to explain a metaphor? ›

A metaphor is a figure of speech that implicitly compares two unrelated things, typically by stating that one thing is another (e.g., “that chef is a magician”). Metaphors can be used to create vivid imagery, exaggerate a characteristic or action, or express a complex idea.

What is the difference between an analogy and a metaphor? ›

A metaphor is often poetically saying something is something else. An analogy is saying something is like something else to make some sort of an explanatory point. You can use metaphors and similes when creating an analogy.

How do you explain metaphors to a child? ›

A metaphor is a comparison which is not literally true. It suggests what something is like by comparing it with something else with similar characteristics. For example: 'My brother' is a piglet is a metaphor.

How do you know if a word is a metaphor? ›

A metaphor compares one kind of thing to another kind of thing. This definition incorporates sub-categories like analogy, parable, story, metonymy and a bunch of others you learned about in school. If it compares one kind of thing to another, it's a metaphor. It's not a metaphor if it is literally true.

How do you say something is a metaphor? ›

A metaphor is an implied comparison, as in "the silk of the singer's voice," in contrast to the explicit comparison of the simile, which uses like or as, as in "a voice smooth like silk."

Is raining cats and dogs a metaphor or idiom? ›

Answer and Explanation:

The statement "It's raining cats and dogs" is not a metaphor, which is a comparison of two unlike things. Instead, the phrase is an idiom, which is an expression which taken on a completely different meaning than what it says literally.

What is it called when you give an example to explain something? ›

Biblical parables are also a good example of allegory. An analogy is using an example to explain something else by showing how the two situations are similar. Not a full blown story like allegory, but more elaborate than a metaphor, in which a non-literal meaning is expressed in a single word or short phrase.

What is the opposite of a metaphor? ›

The opposite of a metaphor is something literal, a description without comparison, such as a chronicle, fact, history, narrative, or record.

What are the 8 metaphors? ›

In his book, Images of Organization, Gareth Morgan lays out eight metaphors for an organization: machines, organisms, brains, cultural systems, political systems, psychic prisons, instruments of domination, and flux and transformation.

What is a 5 sentence example of a simile? ›

Common similes
SimileMeaning
My brother is as mad as a hatter.Crazy or unpredictable
The waiter was as busy as a bee/beaver.Industrious or hardworking
The package is as light as a feather.Lightweight or delicate
The student is as sharp as a tack.Intelligent or quick-witted
6 more rows
Aug 12, 2023

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