In common usage, a figure of speech is a word or phrase that means something more or something other than it seems to say—the opposite of a literal expression. In rhetoric, a figure of speech is a type of figurative language (such as metaphor, irony, understatement, or anaphora) that departs from conventional word order or meaning. Nevertheless, figures of speech retain an element of truth, even if they may be misinterpreted.
There are hundreds of figures of speech, and we often utilize them in everyday life. Here are common figures of speech with example phrases and passages.
Common Types of Figures of Speech
Examples of common figures of speech include alliteration, which repeats the initial consonant sounds in neighboring words, and simile, which compares two unlike things using "like" or "as."
Anaphora is another figure of speech involving the repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses or sentences for emphasis. Hyperbole, on the other hand, exaggerates or overstates a situation for emphasis or effect.
Other common figures of speech are antimetabole, antithesis, apostrophe, assonance, irony, metonymy, onomatopoeia, paradox, personification, pun, synecdoche, and understatement.
Watch Now: Common Figures of Speech Explained
Figure of Speech Examples
Following are a few figures of speech that are a bit tongue-in-cheek.
Mr. Burns, "American History X-cellent," "The Simpsons," 2010
"Break a leg, everyone" (to a passing employee). "I said break a leg." (The employee then breaks his own leg with a hammer.) "My God, man! That was a figure of speech. You're fired!"
Peter Falk and Robert Walker, Jr., "Mind Over Mayhem," "Columbo," 1974
Lieutenant Columbo: "So you had an hour to kill before you had to get back to the airport."
Dr. Neil Cahill: "I take it you mean to use that phrase, to kill.' You mean that literally."
Lieutenant Columbo: "No, I was just using a figure of speech. I'm not making an accusation."
Jonathan Baumbach, "My Father More or Less," "Fiction Collective," 1982
"What if there were a gun to your head, what would you say?"
"Whose gun are you thinking of putting to my head?"
"It was just a figure of speech, for God's sake. You don't have to be so literal about it."
"It's only a figure of speech when you don't have a gun in your possession."
Carmen Carter et al., "Doomsday World (Star Trek: The Next Generation, No. 12)," 1990
"'Yes,' said Coleridge. 'The new Commercial Trading Hall... The emptiest building in town, gentlemen. If there are twenty people in it at any given time, I'll eat my tricorder on the spot.'
"Data looked at the archaeologist, and Geordi caught the look. 'That's only a figure of speech, Data. She doesn't really intend to eat it.'
"The android nodded. 'I am familiar with the expression, Geordi.'"
Metaphor as a Figure of Thought
A metaphor is a trope or figure of speech, in which an implied comparison is made between two unlike things that actually have something in common, as these quotes show.
Ning Yu, "Imagery," "Encyclopedia of Rhetoric and Composition," 1996
"In its broad sense, a metaphor is not only a figure of speech but also a figure of thought. It is a mode of apprehension and a means of perceiving and expressing something in a radically different way. In such a sense, figurative images are not simply decorative but serve to reveal aspects of experience in a new light."
"Teddy Roosevelt and the Treasure of Ursa Major," adapted by Ronald Kidd from the play by Tom Isbell, 2008
"Reaching into her pocket, [Ethel] pulled out the paper, held it in the moonlight, and read, 'Beneath this brilliant metaphor will there treasure be.'
"What's a metaphor?' I asked.
"Ethel said, 'It's a word that compares one thing to another, to show how they might be alike.'
"'Well,' I said, 'if the metaphor is brilliant, maybe it's the chandelier.'
"They stared at me. I don't know why. If you ask me, the clue had seemed pretty obvious.
"'You know,' said Kermit, 'I think Archie is right.' He turned to Ethel. 'I can't believe I just said that.'"
Simile as Another Kind of Comparison
A simile is a figure of speech in which two fundamentally unlike things are explicitly compared, usually in a phrase introduced by like or as, as these quotes demonstrate.
Donita K. Paul, "Two Tickets to the Christmas Ball," 2010
"'What's a simile?' asked Sandy. She looked to Cora for an answer.
"'When you compare something to something else to get a better picture of it in your head. The clouds look like cotton balls. The edge of the snow shovel is sharp like a knife.'"
Jay Heinrichs, "Word Hero: A Fiendishly Clever Guide to Crafting the Lines That Get Laughs," 2011
"The simile is a metaphor that gives itself away. 'The moon is a balloon': that's a metaphor. 'The moon is like a balloon': that's a simile."
Oxymoron as an Apparent Contradiction
An oxymoron is a figure of speech usually one or two words in which seemingly contradictory terms appear side by side.
Bradley Harris Dowden, "Logical Reasoning," 1993
"A contradiction in terms is also called an oxymoron. Debates are often started by asking whether a term is an oxymoron. For example, is artificial intelligence an oxymoron? Jokes are often based in oxymorons; is military intelligence an oxymoron?"
Dianne Blacklock, "False Advertising," 2007
"Her husband got hit by a bus. What was Gemma supposed to say? More to the point, what did Helen want to hear?
"'Well,' said Gemma, going to sit on the bed beside Helen, who looked a little taken aback as she shifted to make room. 'You can't have an accident on purpose,' Gemma went on. 'That's an oxymoron. If there was intent, it wasn't an accident.'
"'I guess I'm wondering if there isn't hidden intent in everything we do,' said Helen."
Hyperbole as Exaggeration
Hyperbole is a figure of speech in which exaggeration is used for emphasis or effect.
Steve Atinsky, "Tyler on Prime Time," 2002
"Samantha and I sat in chairs that had been set up near the table.
"'What's hyperbole?' I asked her.
"'It's a fancy way of saying bull.'"
Thomas S. Kane, "The New Oxford Guide to Writing," 1988
"Mark Twain was a master of hyperbole, as he reveals in this description of a tree after an ice storm: '[I]t stands there the acme, the climax, the supremest possibility in art or nature, of bewildering, intoxicating, intolerable magnificence. One cannot make the words strong enough.'"
Understatement as Beauty or Sarcasm
Understatement, the opposite of hyperbole, is a figure of speech in which a writer or speaker deliberately makes a situation seem less important or serious than it is.
Fiona Harper, "English Lord, Ordinary Lady," 2008
"She read what [Will] was going to say in his eyes before the words left his lips.
"'I love you.'
"So simple. No frills, no grandiose gestures. It was so Will. Suddenly, she understood the beauty of understatement."
Steph Swainston, "No Present Like Time," 2006
"[Serein] sat in the doorway, legs out onto the half deck, huddling in his greatcoat. 'Comet,' he said. 'You weren't well.'
"'Is that understatement a new type of sarcasm you're experimenting with?'"
The Cliché
A cliché is a trite expression whose effectiveness has been worn out through overuse and excessive familiarity.
David Punter, "Metaphor," 2007
"[I]t is interesting that the phrase 'just a figure of speech' has become a cliché as if for something to be a figure of speech in some way downgrades it. It may not be going too far to say that there is a certain denial going on in this view; that it is more convenient and comfortable to pretend that there are some speech forms [that] do not use figures of speech and thus give us access to a solid, incontrovertible perception of the real, in contrast to which the figure of speech is in some way abstracted, lacking in purchase."
Laura Toffler-Corrie, "The Life and Opinions of Amy Finawitz," 2010
"I'm quite sure he doesn't really think you have been abducted by aliens. It was just a figure of speech, like 'Oh, she's just little Miss Sunshine' or 'What a clown.' When you use expressions like that (which I totally never do), it doesn't mean a person is really an inhumanly hot solar ball or that they're a member of the circus. It's not literal."
More on Figures of Speech
For more information on figures of speech, you can explore the following: