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Nonliteral

Nonliteral is an adjective used to describe language whose meaning goes beyond the literal interpretation of its words. In linguistics, semiotics, and literary studies, nonliteral language is contrasted with literal language and includes various forms of figurative or pragmatic meaning. Nonliteral expressions rely on shared knowledge, cultural conventions, and context to convey intentions such as imagery, emphasis, irony, or humor.

Common forms include metaphor, simile, metonymy, synecdoche, personification, hyperbole, irony, sarcasm, and idioms. Idioms are conventional

Nonliteral interpretation depends on context and audience; misinterpretation can occur across cultures or languages. In translation,

Examples: “It's raining cats and dogs” (heavy rain); “Time is a thief” (time steals opportunities); “She has

Related concepts include figurative language, idiomaticity, and pragmatic inference. The term nonliteral serves as an umbrella

phrases
whose
overall
meaning
cannot
be
deduced
from
the
individual
words.
Metaphor
involves
mapping
concepts
from
one
domain
onto
another
(time
is
a
thief).
Irony
involves
saying
something
opposite
of
what
is
meant,
often
for
humorous
or
critical
effect.
Hyperbole
uses
deliberate
exaggeration.
These
forms
may
be
conventional
(as
in
idioms)
or
novel
(creative
metaphor).
nonliteral
expressions
often
require
adaptation
to
preserve
intent
and
effect.
In
literature,
nonliteral
language
creates
imagery,
nuance,
and
emotional
resonance.
In
everyday
speech,
it
functions
to
convey
attitudes,
stance,
or
humor
without
literal
assertions.
a
heart
of
stone”
(callousness).
category
across
disciplines
for
language
whose
meaning
is
not
the
directly
stated
proposition.