Hyperbole To Kill A Mockingbird

Yahoo! Sports: Harper Lee, 'To Kill a Mockingbird' author, has died at 89

NEW YORK (AP) — Harper Lee, the elusive novelist whose child's-eye view of racial injustice in a small Southern town, "To Kill a Mockingbird," became standard reading for millions of young people and ...

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AOL: ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ Star Recalls Her On-Set Experience With Robert Duvall After His Death

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Robert Duvall’s performance in his first film, To Kill a Mockingbird, left a lasting impression not only on viewers but also on his young co-star Mary Badham. Duvall—who died on Sunday, February 15, ...

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‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ Star Recalls Her On-Set Experience With Robert Duvall After His Death

When the figure is from the same field, it's hyperbole, so being freezing isn't a metaphor for being very cold; it's a hyperbolical use of a figure - exaggerating the degree to which one is cold.

Hi, I recently felt particularly stupid to learn that "hyperbole" seems to be defined as intentional exaggeration for effect. I had always thought it usually referred to unintentional exaggeration. This may have been due to my tendency to use it in a derogatory way, e.g.: "there goes that...

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I'm not even a native speaker, but agree with Roy, that "immer" is somehow off. "ständig" sounds best and idiomatic in the sentence, to me. It is a bit of a hyperbole in the speech/construction, sort of like a mother to a teenager: Ich bin nicht hier, um ständig Deine Wäsche zu waschen.

We like hyperbole because we like the drama and enthusiasm it connotes - it actually sounds friendly and engaging to most English speakers. So you will often hear things like "This pie is absolutely delicious!

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