「Metaphorically」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Metaphorically

1語右で並び替え

該当件数:43件

  • Metaphorically a "Trojan Horse" has come to mean any tric
  • ate objects from their human captivity and metaphorically allude to a strange new subterranean world
  • Its literal meaning is sustainer, a name metaphorically and attributively used for Allah or God.
  • y is diguised as a wind up music box doll, metaphorically and actually on a pedestal.
  • rther explaining that she does not mean it metaphorically, and that she literally is a "whore".
  • He refers to this metaphorically as the use of power downwards.
  • he next breath states that his need is to, metaphorically at least, put her through the shredder in
  • will be 'shot down in flames' and will get metaphorically burned.
  • Based on this definition, the term has metaphorically come to be used within a context of econom
  • leased on other labels (usually in what UR metaphorically describe as "reconnaissance" or "infiltrat
  • He was metaphorically described as trapped like a turtle by the
  • in surrounding towns and so were forced to metaphorically eat "humble pie".
  • ll as his envy and antagonism towards him, metaphorically equating their relationship to that of a s
  • the tag, "Here's Your Sign", Engvall then metaphorically gives these people a sign declaring their
  • and the "thumb" and "palm" domains of the metaphorically hand-shaped DNA polymerase molecule.
  • Food items are also used metaphorically in slang sexual terminology and poetry.
  • s "embarrado", and the song uses this word metaphorically in the very sense of the subject's heart b
  • The term "yardstick" is also used metaphorically in reference to anything which serves as a
  • eferring to the dowry affair are sometimes metaphorically interpreted as being oranges or other frui
  • seless, and cumbersome - so-called because metaphorically its only productive use is to be thrown in
  • nation to the U.S. Supreme Court, she was ( metaphorically) Judge Sotomayor's sherpa.
  • nces of a letter to the editor in which he metaphorically likened the Czech Communists to Oedipus.
  • This can also be read metaphorically: meningitis is known to cause neck stiffne
  • He was surprised to find that he was, metaphorically, on the same page as the playwright and fe
  • society which willfully walls itself off ( metaphorically or physically) from the rest of the world.
  • e who falsely claim to teach the truth, by metaphorically portraying false prophets as wolves in she
  • eoccupied with sex might be compared to or metaphorically referred to as a monkey, as might a romant
  • ular Persian and Middle Eastern name which metaphorically refers to the personal attributes of beaut
  • he wings belong to a single eagle which is metaphorically related to God, but he said he could make
  • he wings belong to a single eagle which is metaphorically related to God, but he said he could make
  • uropean illustrator), either physically or metaphorically so.
  • , a worker "on the shop floor" may be used metaphorically sometimes as a synonym for the working cla
  • ally God in the flesh (incarnate), but was metaphorically speaking, the presence of God.
  • Metaphorically, the stone is thought to be sharp and pric
  • ism that he began in 1945 to write Angelo, metaphorically the laboratory in which he experimented, t
  • nd "floods," and "winds," He is expressing metaphorically the calamities and afflictions that befall
  • The verb to ruminate has been extended metaphorically to mean to ponder thoughtfully or to medit
  • was also self-learning, so one phrase used metaphorically to describe something should not be used i
  • Although he meant this name metaphorically to describe the bone's appearance, this id
  • erally, Fanilo means torch, but it is also metaphorically used for a spokesman.
  • However, this kind of rap music can be metaphorically viewed as the world in general, for these
  • Divinity is identified metaphorically with the sky, and the power of Divinity is
  • terms of interacting (either literally or metaphorically) with each other in mutually modifying way