Elgee wrote:
Metaphor: I am a lioness who patrols the darkness on my nighttime walks.
Simile: I am like a lioness who patrols the darkness on my nighttime walks.
It's part stereotype that autists don't get metaphors, similies or idioms. Many autistics are professional writers. I've read their work. They use "abstract" language. I'm good at getting idioms -- save for a few. I grew up hearing "it's raining cats and dogs," and, "the grass is always greener on the other side of the fence." How does an autistic, with at least average intelligence, NOT get these when they begin hearing them in childhood?
However, the two I've always had a problem with is: "Never look a gift horse in the mouth," and "take it with a grain of salt."
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You didnt pay for the merchandise. So you dont assess it and judge it overly harshly. A HUGE number of English language expression have to do with horse.
The second expression is more obscure. The ancient Romans had this belief that salt was antidote to poison. So if your afraid an enemy was trying to poison you you "took your food with a grain of salt". It was a totally false belief.
Then 13 centuries after the fall of the Roman Empire the European elite (and the American founding fathers) of the 18th centurey were into Greco-Roman civilization, and literature. And Enlightenment figures (like Thomas Jefferson) revived the expression (even though they knew that anti poison belief was wrong), but repurposed it to mean immunity to lies rather than to literal poison.