I used to obsessively research what figurative speech meant. For example, "Don't look a gift horse in the mouth" - looking a horse in the mouth is inspecting it for something wrong, and the saying is telling you not to look for something wrong with what you've received. Or at least, that's how I understand it.
I know what a lot of figures of speech mean, but the understanding isn't always immediately there. If someone uses one, I have to think about it for a minute.
I don't think I'm as visual a thinker as Temple Grandin, but she did mention once about how when someone uses a figure of speech, like "raining cats and dogs", she'll get a literal image of that in her head. That happens with figures of speech for me. I get an immediate literal picture in my head, not of what it means, but of what it says. Like an actual image of cats and dogs falling from the sky.
I think that's why I don't have an immediate understanding of the figure of speech. I have to get around the literal image in my head first.
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Transgender. Call me 'he' please. I'm a guy.
Diagnosed Bipolar and Aspergers (questioning the ASD diagnosis).
Free speech means the right to shout 'theatre' in a crowded fire.
--Abbie Hoffman