Some examples of extreme exaggeration are:
- I've answered this a thousand times.
- My boyfriend is like twelve feet tall.
- In the 40's? That's freezing!
- Hot as hell
- Making a mountain out of a molehill
- As easy as taking candy from a baby
A hyperbole is a literary term where exaggeration is used to emphasize a point.
A hyperbole
hyperbole
exaggeration and stretching the truth to extreme lengths
A hyperbole is an exaggeration, but more extreme. "I'm so hungry, I could eat a horse" is an example of a hyperbole.
Extreme exaggeration used in a literary work is known as hyperbole.
The genre Satire uses extreme exaggeration as to expose folly through ironic situations and settings.
hyberbilye hyperbole
A hyperbole is a statement of extreme exaggeration to show emphasis.
In "How to Live to Be 200," Stephen Leacock used exaggeration by suggesting extreme and unrealistic scenarios for living a long life, such as eating unappetizing foods like sawdust and brickbats, avoiding physical activity at all costs, and constantly worrying about one's health. This exaggeration serves to satirize extreme health fads and the obsession with longevity.
Conceit is a figure of speech that compares two unlike things in a surprising or exaggerated way to emphasize a particular characteristic. Hyperbole, on the other hand, is an extreme exaggeration used to create emphasis or effect. While both involve exaggeration, conceit usually involves a more elaborate comparison, whereas hyperbole is a direct and extreme exaggeration.
Referring to a person who may be prone to extreme exaggeration. someone You cant believe,