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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 02-Aug-2007, 17:20
zxcv9991
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Default metaphor or no

I am in a english class and my teacher says this statement is a metaphor and i just don't agree with him just wondering what you think?

After a sluggish first half, the team finally got on track.
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Old 02-Aug-2007, 17:27
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Default Re: metaphor or no

Quote:
Originally Posted by zxcv9991 View Post
I am in a english class and my teacher says this statement is a metaphor and i just don't agree with him just wondering what you think?

After a sluggish first half, the team finally got on track.
I may be wrong, but I can`t see any metaphor in your sentence.
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Old 02-Aug-2007, 17:39
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Default Re: metaphor or no

The statement isn't itself a metaphor, but it uses two. The first is such an old metaphor that some people would say it's not one - "sluggish" [="behaving like a slug"]. But many words are based on metaphors if you look back far enough in their history; the word "muscle" means "little mouse".

The second is "on track".

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Old 02-Aug-2007, 17:40
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Default Re: metaphor or no

I don't really think it is either - you could stretch and say that the first half was being compared to a slug (sluggish), but it isn't really making that comparison - it's just using that adjective. I'm with you on this one.
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Old 03-Aug-2007, 01:23
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Default Re: metaphor or no

I think there is no bright line between idiomatic uses like "on track" or "got off-track" and a metaphor like "the wheels fell off the train."

Since none of the team members literally ran on a track, it's a metaphorical use... or is it an idiom? It's really not clear.

[a writer, not a teacher]
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