PS: Check out these free English learning resources: Article: Best 1000 Things to Do in Paris — Verbosity or Circumlocution — Falkland Islands Timeline — Top 1000 Trip Ideas
- vincentJanuary 2021
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nmesomtoChukwuJanuary 2021 It’s tricky question really, ’cos while most people use ”idioms,” ”sayings,” ”proverbs,” many don’t refer to ”expressions.” There are several literary devices in English. An expression in general is an imaginative and nonliteral way of presenting an idea. An idiom is a phrase that conveys a different meaning from the words employed (also a nonliteral meaning). However, many idioms are standard to certain groups of people whereas expressions could be more personal. Here are some articles that might help: https://examples.yourdictionary.com/famous-examples-of-idioms-in-literature.html https://www.learnersdictionary.com/qa/Idioms-metaphors-similes-and-hyperbole |
will_stewaMay 2021 Idioms are more of an implying and require a shared understanding of context. In my area there is an expression that is also idiomatic. ”Raining harder than a cow pissing on a flat rock.” You have to have seen a cow pee. so a new yorker wouldn’t use it but anyone born in the country (Rural areas not the nation) would understand it even if they have never heard it.
vincentJanuary 2021 Thanks !
sasijayaramJanuary 2021 Idioms are phrases that are sometimes defined differently from the words that are used to make them. An expression, on the other hand, is sharing your views or ideas through speech, facial features, and even with the use of body language. |
vincentJanuary 2021 Thanks