Metaphors and analogies in neurology: From Kerplunk to dripping taps

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Abstract

Although we use metaphors and analogies in everyday speech all the time, I for one sometimes forget the definitions. A metaphor is a figure of speech in which a name, descriptive term or phrase is applied to an object or action to which it is imaginatively but not literally applicable. For example: revising for exams at the last minute seems to be 'sailing very close to the wind'; we 'get to grips with' learning neurology; it's raining' cats and dogs' and so on. An analogy is another figure of speech, which uses correspondence or partial similarity to illustrate an idea, feeling or experience; for example, 'your face has gone as red as a beetroot', I feel 'just like I am on the deck of a boat in a heavy sea'. The Editor.

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Fuller, G., & Hughes, T. (2003). Metaphors and analogies in neurology: From Kerplunk to dripping taps. Practical Neurology. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1474-7766.2003.03131.x

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