Eng 100 – Metaphor Use in Everyday Communication
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Tiffany Morris
Jeannette Bates
ENG 100
October 1, 2010
Metaphor Use in Everyday Communication
In the reading excerpt of Metaphors We Live By, the authors George Lakoff and Mark Johnson content that “Metaphors not only make our thoughts more vivid and interesting but that they actually structure our perceptions and understanding.” What really give a metaphor to power to structure our perceptions? The answer to this question lies in the fact that metaphors have the ability to not only put things into understandable terms so that we are able to relate to a particular situation, but to also paint a visual for the person who is receiving the information. We will take a look at an example of a metaphorically painted picture.
Here is an example of a metaphorical picture in everyday life that is used to get a point across. Suppose that your best friend has just returned from vacation in the Caribbean. As she describes her many adventures, she tells you that the ocean was clear and blue, and the hotel was beautiful and had very attentive staff. Although these descriptions may leave you with the impression that she enjoyed her trip, did it really put you in the moment and give you a true feeling of the joy that she felt?
Now lets revisit your friends trips using metaphors. As your friend describes her adventures, she tells you that she was treated as a queen with her every whim waiting to be fulfilled by the staff and that during her visit to the beach, she swam in a sea of diamonds. The second description of your friends adventure not only gives better detail and paints a mental picture, it may also seem to put you in the moment and allow you to mentally experience some of what she has experienced.
Lakoff and Johnson stated “Most people think they can get along perfectly well without metaphor. We have found on the contrary, that metaphor is pervasive in everyday life, not just language, but in thought and action.” Some examples of metaphor in everyday life are things such as “legs of a table” or a “straight” person. We all know that a table is an inanimate object and therefore does not have legs in the true sense of the word, but because the stilts on a table provide support just as the legs on a living animal, the metaphor makes sense. Likewise, we often refer to an individual who prefers the opposite sex as “straight.” Although this individual may not necessarily be able to stand upright, they are referred to as “straight” because their sexual preference coincides with what is considered to be the “norm.”
Contrary to the assumption of many, metaphor is not just the “device of the poetic imagination” or a “characteristic