Use the word hyperbole in a sentence

Definition of Hyperbole

an exaggeration or overstatement used to evoke strong feelings

Examples of Hyperbole in a sentence

During the hurricane, it seemed as though the hyperbole, “raining cats and dogs“, was almost accurate.

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“Sitting is the new smoking“ is silly hyperbole used by health journalists to garner attention.

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It seems like everyone and their mother is angry about something right now. (This is hyperbole, as I do not mean literally everyone.)

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Usually the “crazy weather we’re having“ talk is just hyperbole, but the forecasted streak of record-hot temperatures is no untruth.

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Obviously the network is overreacting and engaging in hyperbole when they say “55 million people are in danger!“ for normal thunderstorms.

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When Henry made a hyperbole on the stand, the judge gave him a warning and reminded him to stick to the facts.

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I can say without hyperbole this is the greatest meal I have ever had!

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It would be great if you could simply tell me the basic facts without including a hyperbole of any sort.

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If the politician uses one more hyperbole in his speech, I will know he is exaggerating about all his claims.

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Being that you’re an only child, I can say without hesitation or hyperbole you’re the best daughter I’ve ever had!

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Definition of Hyperbole

Hyperbole is a figure of speech and literary device that creates heightened effect through deliberate exaggeration. Hyperbole is often a boldly overstated or exaggerated claim or statement that adds emphasis without the intention of being literally true. In rhetoric and literature, hyperbole is often used for serious, comic, or ironic effects.

For example, lyrics to The Ballad of Davy Crockett by Thomas W. Blackburn contain hyperbole:

Born on a mountain top in Tennessee
Greenest state in the land of the free
Raised in the woods so he knew ev’ry tree
Kilt him a be ‘are [bear] when he was only three
Davy, Davy Crockett, king of the wild frontier

The audience isn’t supposed to believe that this character truly knew “every tree” or that he literally killed a bear when he was “only three.” Instead, hyperbole is used to exaggerate Davy Crockett’s frontier experience and make him seem larger than life. Hyperbole is a frequently used literary device in tall tales, legends, and folk stories. The audience is aware that such claims are to emphasize the traits of the characters and not to be taken literally.

Common Examples of Hyperbole in Everyday Speech

Many people use hyperbole as a figure of speech to make something seem larger or more important than it actually is. Such exaggeration or distortion can help express strong emotion, emphasize a point, or even evoke humor. Here are some common examples of hyperbole in everyday speech:

  • I’m so hungry that I could eat a horse.
  • That purse looks like it cost a million dollars.
  • I Love You to the moon and back.
  • He feels buried under a mountain of work.
  • I’m dying of thirst.
  • That dog is the cutest thing alive.
  • She loves him more than life itself.
  • This suitcase weighs a ton.
  • He heard an ear-splitting shriek.
  • This race is going to be the death of me.
  • I’m so tired that I could sleep for a week.
  • That song is the worst thing I have ever heard.
  • This room is so cold that I’m getting hypothermia.
  • i am addicted to skateboarding.
  • She is more beautiful than the moon and stars.

Examples of Hyperbole in Advertising

Many advertising campaigns and slogans feature hyperbole as a way to attract customers to their products. Here are some examples of hyperbole in well-known advertisements:

  • When you’re here, you’re family. (Olive Garden)
  • Breakfast of champions (Wheaties)
  • The king of beers (Budweiser)
  • The best a man can get (Gillette)
  • When there is no tomorrow (FedEx)
  • Nothing runs like a Deere. (John Deere)
  • Tastes so good, cats ask for it by name. (Meow Mix)
  • Taste the rainbow (Skittles)
  • america runs on Dunkin’ (Dunkin’ Donuts)
  • Red Bull gives you wings (Red Bull)

Famous Examples of Hyperbole in Movie Lines

Hyperbole is effective in creating movie lines that are humorous and/or dramatic, which makes them memorable as well for the audience. Here are some famous examples of hyperbole in well-known movie lines:

  • Love means never having to say you’re sorry. (Love Story)
  • I’m just one stomach flu away from my goal weight. (The Devil Wears Prada)
  • I’m the king of the world! (Titanic)
  • As God is my witness, I’ll never be hungry again (Gone with the Wind)
  • To infinity and beyond! (Toy Story)
  • I’m mad as hell, and I’m not going to take this anymore! (Network)
  • You sit on a throne of lies. (Elf)
  • Can I use the facilities? Because being pregnant makes me pee like Seabiscuit! (Juno)
  • You can’t! It’s impossible! I’m far too busy, so ask me now before I again become sane. (The Incredibles)
  • What is this? A school for ants? (Zoolander)
  • There are only three ages for women in Hollywood: babe, district attorney, and Driving Miss Daisy. (The First Wives Club)
  • The best thing about visiting the President is the food! Now, since it was all free, and I wasn’t hungry but thirsty, I must’ve drank me fifteen Dr. Peppers. (Forrest Gump)
  • You’ll shoot your eye out. (A Christmas Story)
  • We are going to pull off the true crime of the century. We are going to steal the moon! (Despicable Me)

Difference Between Hyperbole and Overstatement

Hyperbole and overstatement are often used interchangeably, and they can serve as synonyms for each other. However, overstatement and hyperbole have subtle differences in their use and intended effect. An overstatement is an exaggeration or a statement in excess of what most would consider reasonable. A hyperbole is also an exaggeration, yet it is often more extreme than an overstatement and its intended effect is as a literary or rhetorical device. Both overstatement and hyperbole are figures of speech and are not meant to be understood literally. Hyperbole, however, is utilized as a device in literature and rhetoric, not just a form of figurative language.

Difference Between Metaphor and Hyperbole

Metaphor and hyperbole are commonly used literary devices. A writer uses metaphor to compare things with some other persons or things. At times, it is an unusual comparison. Sometimes it seems overstatement which is not meant normally. In the case of hyperbole, it is different because its usage is meant to exaggerate and not take the thing or idea literally. The statement that his words are music could be an overstatement but not always. Hence it is a metaphor. However, to say that his words are the greatest melody that was ever heard is an exaggeration and this is hyperbole, which is always meant to exaggerate things.

Using Hyperbole in Satire

As hyperbole is meant to overstate and exaggerate things, it is also meant to bring humor. Therefore, using hyperbole in satire makes things or ideas or persons larger than life or lesser than life with exaggeration or even understatement. Satire also works on the same lines that it has two premises and the first one is based on a story with some overstatement and exaggeration such as Jonathan Swift does in Gulliver Travels.

Use of Hyperbole in Sentences

  1. Although most of Henry’s statements are straightforward, they have some substance as he himself is the embodiment of the judiciary.
  2. Sarah’s laughter could bring the entire building crashing.
  3. Lifting a toddler, Rohan teased ‘You are as light as a feather’.
  4. Why don’t you walk faster? You’re as slow as a tortoise.
  5. Didn’t I tell you a million times not to leave the dishes in the sink without cleaning your plate?

Examples of Hyperbole in Literature

Hyperbole is effective as a literary device in many ways. By exaggerating something in an extreme way, whether it is a character’s traits, writer’s tone, theme, or idea, hyperbole can capture a reader’s attention. In addition, it can cause the reader to question a narrator’s reliability, reflect on the writer’s true intention, or provide a level of absurd humor for entertainment.

Here are some examples of hyperbole in literature and its effect as a literary device:

Example 1: A Modest Proposal (Jonathan Swift)

I have been assured by a very knowing American of my acquaintance in London, that a young healthy child well nursed, is, at a year old, a most delicious nourishing and wholesome food, whether stewed, roasted, baked, or boiled; and I make no doubt that it will equally serve in a fricasie, or a ragoust.

Swift’s satirical essay reflects his view of the oppressive policies and attitudes toward Ireland and the poor on the part of the British people and overall aristocracy in the early eighteenth century. This is one of the most famous hyperbolic passages in literature, as Swift suggests selling and using Irish children as a food source to relieve the economic plight of the Irish people. Of course, this “proposal” is a figure of speech and intended as an extreme exaggeration rather than a literal solution. However, the practical and almost casual tone with which Swift delivers his hyperbole is as shocking for readers as what he appears to be suggesting. As a literary and rhetorical device in the essay, hyperbole achieves a serious and ironic effect for the reader.

Satirists often rely on hyperbole to emphasize a point and focus a reader’s attention on a socio-political or economic problem. Unfortunately, there were people in Swift’s time that made a literal interpretation of his modest proposal. This caused a backlash among certain members of the aristocracy due to their misunderstanding of his hyperbole. However, for a modern audience, rather than discounting Swift’s essay as something ridiculous, his hyperbolic proposal achieves its intended effect by causing the reader to reflect on the underlying problems that would result in such a dramatic literary essay–both in Swift’s time and today.

Example 2: Sonnet 147 (William Shakespeare)

My love is as a fever, longing still
For that which longer nurseth the disease,
Feeding on that which doth preserve the ill,
Th’ uncertain sickly appetite to please.
My reason, the physician to my love,
Angry that his prescriptions are not kept,
Hath left me, and I desperate now approve
Desire is death, which physic did except.
Past cure I am, now reason is past care,
And, frantic-mad with evermore unrest,
My thoughts and my discourse as madmen’s are,
At random from the truth vainly expressed.
For I have sworn thee fair, and thought thee bright,
Who art as black as hell, as dark as night.

In this Shakespearean sonnet, the poet utilizes hyperbole as a literary device to describe his love and desire for his beloved. The poet exaggerates his feelings to the point of claiming that they make him ill and mad beyond cure. Shakespeare realizes that his audience understands that the poet does not literally mean what he is saying. However, the sentiment behind such hyperbole can be interpreted in two ways.

First, readers can interpret the hyperbolic lovesickness as the poet’s method of describing the way infatuation and desire, especially if unrequited, rob people of their reason and logic. This passion and preoccupation can figuratively feel like illness or madness that grows exponentially and is without a cure. In this sense, the intended effect of hyperbole as a literary device would be relatively serious. Second, readers can interpret this hyperbolic lovesickness as the poet’s way of ironically expressing how people feel when infatuated or impassioned. In this case, Shakespeare would be satirizing such love and romantic poetry as well through hyperbole, emphasizing the significance of the final couplet.

Example 3: The Foreigner (Larry Shue)

ELLARD. That’s my favorite name. If I ever catch me that chipmunk,
that’s what he’s gonna be— Buddy the chipmunk.
CATHERINE. Ellard, you couldn’t catch a chipmunk if all its legs were
broken and it was glued to the palm of your hand.

In Shue’s play, the character Catherine utilizes hyperbole to reveal to the audience her perception of her brother’s intelligence and ability. Such an extremely exaggerated statement not only indicates the witty humor of the playwright but also creates an absurd and memorable image for the audience. In this case, Shue’s hyperbolic dialogue is designed for comic effect and to showcase the personality traits of the characters onstage. Literary devices such as hyperbole are valuable in dramatic literary works that are meant to be performed for an audience. Hyperbole allows the playwright to emphasize aspects of certain characters and their relationship to each other. This enhances the audience’s understanding of the play and the writer’s intended meaning.

Synonyms of Hyperbole

As hyperbole is a literary device, no word conveys the same meanings. The following are the closest synonyms of Hyperbole: exaggeration, overstatement, magnification, overplaying, excess, overkill, or puffery.

Ezoic

1 He’s not usually given to hyperbole.

2 American humor is founded largely on hyperbole.

3 It was not hyperbole to call it the worst storm in twenty years.

4 This astonishing performance produced a gush of hyperbole.

5 This is the metaphor gone beyond hyperbole into simile.

6 Some cynics might dismiss such statements as cosmic hyperbole.

7 Twenty-four hours until kick-off and the hyperbole was drifting out of control.

8 Buried somewhere in all that hyperbole is a good deal of truth.

9 Hyperbole is a way of life in the culinary world, much to its detriment.

10 One might forgive the hyperbole in a politician but it is less easy to take from academic or journalistic critics.

11 Rick said, with a touch of hyperbole,[www.Sentencedict.com] that it was the best movie he’d ever seen.

12 Hyperbole, perhaps, but this meeting of two of world football’s traditionally strongest sides should none the less prove highly informative.

13 She appropriated slapstick and hyperbole to the delicious purpose of lampooning the fathead who made her life miserable.

14 Already the hyperbole was out of all proportion compared to the evidence.

15 It is only slight hyperbole to say that Roy Disney averted a cultural tragedy.

16 But the hyperbole is fast becoming reality.

17 Instead, recruitment is often an orgy of hyperbole.

18 The phrase is of course a hyperbole.

19 Mr Murdoch was unwise to indulge in adolescent hyperbole.

20 The film is being promoted with all the usual hyperbole.

21 The blurb on the back of the book was full of the usual hyperbole — ‘enthralling’, ‘fascinating’ and so on.

22 Sentence 9, on the other hand, can be seen as a sort of ironic hyperbole: Arthur is paranoiac.

23 The unfinished and unpublished memoirs of Farini are replete with such hyperbole.

24 You get upset in the most florid ways, the most extreme hyperbole.

25 This truth is revealed in a style totally lacking in rancor or hyperbole, both of which would often be warranted.

26 The employees are the real test of whether an involvement program is substantive and effective or mere hyperbole and atmospherics.

27 When the Democrats convene in Chicago later this month, they will try to equal or surpass the Republican hyperbole.

28 Rick Perry, the Texas commissioner of agriculture, is a rancher with an aversion to hyperbole.

29 While Brown touted initiatives created in his tenure, some of the speech was laced with hyperbole.

30 That seemed a sober judgment not even verging on hyperbole.

Hyperbole (; Ancient Greek: ὑπερβολή, huperbolḗ, from ὑπέρ (hupér, ‘above’) and βάλλω (bállō, ‘I throw’)) is the use of exaggeration as a rhetorical device or figure of speech. (Wikipedia) (See all definitions)

Don’t misunderstand that statement for hyperbole; we’re talking about a marginal difference here.

MOVIES & TV

THE DVD After a couple of DVD releases on Italy’s «Medusa» label, one of which presented a few scenes out of sequence, Blue Underground steps up to produce a 2-disc Special Edition of The Bird with the Crystal Plumage that, without hyperbole, contains the best-looking incarnation of the film to date.

MOVIES & TV

Time is now aware of what Tom Zeller also missed in this article (although he managed the best explanation I have seen to date of land use change and indirect land use change): that the Searchinger study, on which the Time/Grunwald story was based, is a collection of unprovable hypothesis — mere hyperbole unsupportable by science or concrete facts.

ENVIRONMENT

I’d say the use of name calling, assumption and hyperbole will be giving anyone who’s taking any notice anymore all the information they need to come to the same conclusions as me

BOOKS

Ok, that is hyperbole, but that is more along the lines of what many people below have heard, not «just switch or supplement with formula.»

PARENTING

That’s painting with broad strokes, though, with more than a smattering of PR hyperbole thrown in.

AUTOMOBILES

Hard-to-grasp concepts like personification, hyperbole, or juxtaposition can come alive through both student-created videos and curated videos like this.

EDUCATION

«Make your points clearly and succinctly and your query has a much greater chance at garnering notice, while using hyperbole in your entreaties will have its exact opposite intended effect on most VCs,» says Ian Sigalow.

BUSINESS

I was talking with Meghan Anderson, VP Marketing for HubSpot, about how much has changed (and how much hasn’t) over the last 10 + years since HubSpot brought us the Inbound Marketing Revolution (okay, a little blog hyperbole).

BUSINESS

Not even Monck’s hyperbole is as ridiculous.

ENVIRONMENT

It was hyperbole, Eugene would say that is what the H stood for in his name, but what he was getting at is that spiritual leadership is one of the best places to hide your sin because within your faith community people often give their leaders the benefit of the doubt.

RELIGION

A particular type of folk tale, the tall tale, incorporates hyperbole into storytelling, as events and elements are widely exaggerated.

EDUCATION

All of the above will not actually happen, not for a few months at least, but that won’t stop the hyperbole surrounding Madrid’s transfer dealings.

SPORTS

Smithson meant this diagnosis to sound grave — probably deadly — and he may have been willing to risk hyperbole to get his point across.

ART

True, I’m complacent, but I’m certainly not the only one dealing in hyperbole, either for or against the proposition that we are all doomed, doomed, and even more doomed!

SCIENCE

While their competitors have been delivering platitudes and hyperbole about «reformatting the future,» Jenkins and Rawlinson were dead honest about tough the business side of their company is.

TECHNOLOGY

In the Salon d’Honneur, which Flay characterized as «fantastic» without hyperbole, Andrew Kreps had a knockout retrospective installation by Marc Camille Chaimowicz that included lamps, screens, and two carpets.

ART

They now claim that their statements were merely «expressions of opinion and rhetorical hyperbole… not assertions of fact» — which could be proven false.

ENVIRONMENT

The Friends of Science are no stranger to hyperbole, which is on full-display on the homepage of their website promoting all sorts of pseudo-scientific climate science conspiracy claims.

ENVIRONMENT

I’ve seen all of them cited as evidence that we are «destroying the world» and similar hyperbole.

ENVIRONMENT

It is the sort of hyperbole beloved of politicians — «the war on X» — which rarely, if ever, leads to good policy, and is a purely rhetorical device.

ENVIRONMENT

«Gotham, take control… take control of your city» If there’s one thing that I loathe, and the internet is full of, it’s hyperbole.

MOVIES & TV

In the UK at least, the hyperbole went nuclear:

POLITICS

The Conformist Year: 1970 Director: Bernardo Bertolucci Country: Italy Language: Italian Before The Conformist, Bertolucci had always been a master stylist, but here he worked within the strictures of noir and — excuse my hyperbole — made something of a perfect film.

MOVIES & TV

It may not be hyperbole to say that nursing home abuse is common.

LAW

Any other use is hyperbole and really silly.

RELIGION

HArold, please lay off the hyperbole and editorial comments.

ENVIRONMENT

Overall the resume is filled with hyperbole that I really don’t want to see; there’s simply no excitement or interesting information on there.

JOBS

But it’s worth examining how we have come to express ourselves the way that we do, especially on platforms that coax us into performing our identities in the ways that they design: through emotionality, hyperbole, narcissism, and authority through (seeming) intimacy.

MOVIES & TV

It’s not hyperbole to say that this scheme may with hindsight be regarded as a key turning point in the normalisation of next generation sustainable building in Ireland.

ENVIRONMENT

It’s not hyperbole when I tell you that mother!

RELIGION

You’re going to be bombarded by commentary and hyperbole and think pieces and Twitter feeds.

MOVIES & TV

Furthermore, but less likely, Jesus may also have been using a natural hyperbole (exaggeration), a common figure of speech used in discourse, the same way many Westerners will say, «I am starving» when they are just hungry, or «I’m freezing» when they are just cold.

RELIGION

When Western painters in the mid-late 1800s imagined the exotic landscape of the East, it was filled with caricature and hyperbole.

ART

We seem to be in the grip of e-revolution fever, and we certainly need some cold hard facts in the face of all the hyperbole, which presently seems to be spiralling out of control.

BOOKS

In a statement, Audi characterized the redesigned A8’s exterior styling as the «dawning of a new design era for the entire brand,» but that’s a bit of hyperbole; the new front-end design trades the prior-generation’s tall Singleframe grille for a wider version that’s better integrated with the rest of the car’s styling, but its profile and rear styling don’t stray far from the template established by its predecessor.

AUTOMOBILES

While movies about deadly epidemics have been done before (think Will Smith in I Am Legend and Matthew McConoughey in Sahara), this one is particularly disturbing because Director Steven Soderbergh doesn’t indulge in dramatic hyperbole.

MOVIES & TV

And in a genre often steeped in hype, for once even the «diabolical» label doesn’t feel like hyperbole.

MOVIES & TV

Voters are not stupid and will call out hyperbole for what it is.

POLITICS

It’s a really beautiful, thought-provoking piece of criticism that adds a lot of nuance to a discussion that’s thus far been characterized by so much internet-style hyperbole and value judgements.

ART

While this sounds like hyperbole, it isn’t.

MONEY

It will not be hyperbole to say that HTML5 has opened new doors for the creation of extremely expressive eLearning courses, and this is good as far as eLearning industry is concerned.

EDUCATION

That’s not a hyperbole as you can check out the full gameplay trailer below that shows the game in all its glory.

GAMING

Hercolani: Standard English hyperbole.

SPORTS

Well, let’s leave such hyperboles to sitcom writers and Lawrence Krauss, respectively.

REAL_ESTATE

The smartphone spec arms-race is relentless, however, notable as much for its hyperbole as the minimal attention span of would-be buyers in carrier stores.

TECHNOLOGY

Yes, McCombs occasionally comes across a little like a, well, a used-car salesman — particularly when he’s predicting a 16-0 season for the Vikings, as he did during training camp — but Minnesota has backed up his hyperbole.

SPORTS

The exchange between Chip and Scaperlanda was cogent and instructive, drawing different conclusions from data rather than hyperbole.

RELIGION

Evers said Holtz’s comments regarding Sherman Park were «a bit of hyperbole that I think isn’t fair to Milwaukee Public Schools or the teachers that work in that area.»

EDUCATION

It’s like the hyperbole of what Michael Pollan refers to as «nutritionism».

PARENTING

Hyperbole is a technique that uses exaggeration to emphasise a point, or express and evoke a strong emotion.

Do you want a simple way to remember the definition of hyperbole? Memorise the four words in bold above! Let’s call them the Four E’s:

  1. Exaggeration

  2. Emphasise

  3. Express

  4. Evoke

Hyperbole is a figure of speech, which is a literary device that is not supposed to be taken literally. You should focus on the figurative meaning instead.

Why is hyperbole used?

Hyperbole is often used by people who purposely want to make something seem dramatically greater than it really is, or amplify their feelings and experiences. So why would someone want to do this? Well, it is an effective way to get your point across! Exaggerating a situation is a good way to express strong emotions and emphasise your point. It can also be used to create humour and make things seem more dramatic.

Hyperbole, A range of different emotions, StudySmarterFig. 1 — Different emotions can be exaggerated through the use of hyperbole.

What are some examples of hyperbole?

There are lots of examples of hyperbolic language, so you may have already heard of a few! We will first look at some common examples of hyperbole from everyday language. Then, we will look at the use of hyperbole as a literary device in well-known literature.

Hyperbole in everyday language

“She takes forever to get ready in the morning”

In this phrase, the word ‘forever’ is used by the speaker to imply that the person (she) is taking a very long time to get ready. However, it is not really possible to take ‘forever’ when getting ready. ‘Forever’ is used figuratively to exaggerate the amount of time it takes for her to get ready. It could also be used to express a feeling of impatience, as the speaker may be annoyed by how long she is taking.

“These shoes are killing me”

In this phrase, the word ‘killing’ is used by the speaker to overstate the sense of discomfort. The shoes aren’t literally killing the speaker! The speaker is letting others know that the shoes they are wearing are not comfortable to walk in.

“I’ve told you a million times”

In this phrase, the word ‘million’ is used by the speaker to emphasise the number of times they have told someone something. It is unlikely that they actually said something a million times, but they are instead using exaggeration to convey a sense of frustration, as they may not be paying attention. This phrase is often used when someone tells another person something many times, but they either do not remember it or do not listen!

Add your text here…

“I’m so hungry, I could eat a horse”

In this phrase, the speaker is emphasising the feeling of hunger and exaggerating how much they will be able to eat. They are so hungry, they feel as though they can eat a large amount of food that would be impossible for them to actually eat! If the speaker is saying this to someone who is cooking some food, this could be a way for them to express their impatience as they may be waiting to eat.

“This bag weighs a ton”

In this phrase, the word ‘ton’ is used by the speaker to suggest that the bag is really heavy. It is unlikely that the bag will weigh the same as an actual ‘ton’… If it did, nobody would be able to carry it! Instead, the weight has been emphasised by the speaker to prove that the bag is simply very heavy. This then implies that they find it difficult to carry, or are no longer able to carry it.

Hyperbole, a man carrying a heavy bag, StudySmarterFig. 2 — Hyperbole can be used to exaggerate an experience.

Hyperbole in literature

Kafka on the Shore (Haruki Murakami, 2005)1

“A huge flash of light went off in his brain and everything went white. He stopped breathing. It felt as if he’d been thrown from the top of a tall tower into the depths of hell.

Hyperbole is used here to describe the pain felt by the character Hoshino. In particular, Murakami emphasises the magnitude of Hoshino’s pain through the imagery of hell.

The Perks of Being a Wallflower (Stephen Chbosky, 1999)2

“I won’t go into detail about the whole show, but I had the best time I ever had in my whole life.”

Hyperbole is used here to highlight the feeling of joy felt by the main character, Charlie. By using the superlative ‘best’, this emphasises the happiness felt by Charlie and the significance of the day.

Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine (Gail Honeyman, 2017)3

There have been times when I felt that I might die of loneliness… I truly feel that I might tumble to the ground and pass away if someone doesn’t hold me, touch me.

Hyperbole is used here to exaggerate the sense of loneliness that the main character, Eleanor, feels. It makes for a dramatic but honest description of the effects of loneliness.

Hyperbole vs metaphors and similes – what is the difference?

Metaphors and similes are also examples of figures of speech, as they rely on a figurative meaning to convey a point. They can also both be hyperbolic, but they are not always the same. This could be confusing, but don’t worry! We will now look at the similarities and differences between hyperbole and metaphors/similes, with some examples of each.

Hyperbole vs metaphor

A metaphor is a figure of speech that is used to describe something by referring directly to something else. It should not be taken literally. Unlike hyperbole, which always uses exaggeration, metaphors only use exaggeration sometimes. Below is an example of a metaphor that does not use exaggeration:

“Her voice is music to my ears”

In this phrase, the ‘voice’ is directly compared to ‘music’ to indicate that it is pleasant to listen to.

Below is an example of a metaphor that uses hyperbole to exaggerate a point. This can be referred to as a hyperbolic metaphor:

“That man is a monster”

In this phrase, the ‘man’ is directly referred to as a ‘monster’, which shows that this is an example of a metaphor. However, it also uses hyperbole, as the word ‘monster’ is used to negatively describe the man and exaggerate how awful he is.

Hyperbole vs simile

A simile is a figure of speech that compares two things by using words such as ‘like’ or ‘as’. Its meaning should not be taken literally. Like metaphors, similes can also use hyperbolic language to emphasise a point, but they do not always do this. Below is an example of a simile without hyperbole:

“We are like two peas in a pod”

This uses ‘like’ to compare two different things: ‘we’ and ‘peas in a pod’. In doing so, it is an imaginative way of describing two people as being close; a good match for one another.

Below is an example of a simile that uses hyperbole:

“The person ahead of me walked as slowly as a tortoise”

This compares someone’s walk to that of a tortoise. However, as we know that tortoises walk slowly, this comparison is used to emphasise how slow the person is walking. Instead of simply saying that the person is ‘walking really slowly’, the simile uses the imagery of the tortoise to help us visualise the speed at which the person is walking. It can also be used to signify a sense of frustration, as the person behind the slow walker is probably impatient or in more of a hurry!

Hyperbole — Key takeaways

  • Hyperbole is a technique in the English language that uses exaggeration to emphasise something or evoke strong emotions.

  • Hyperbole is a figure of speech, meaning that, rather than a literal meaning, it has a figurative meaning.

  • Hyperbolic language is used frequently in everyday conversation, and also often appears in literature.

  • Although they all use figurative language, metaphors and similes are not always the same as hyperbole. Hyperbole always uses exaggeration, whereas metaphors and similes only use exaggeration sometimes.

Sources:

1. Haruki Murakami, Kafka on the Shore, 2005.

2. Stephen Chbosky, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, 1999.

3. Gail Honeyman, Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine, 2017.

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