Which of the following describes the relationship between an idiomatic phrase and a literal phrase?

1. An idiomatic phrase presents non-literal language that influences the connotation of the literal phrase.

2. An idiomatic phrase restates the meaning of a literal phrase to make it easier for a reader to understand.

3. A literal phrase indirectly states the meaning of an idiomatic phrase.

4. A literal phrase is the straightforward language that interprets the figurative meaning of an idiomatic phrase.

User Icon for Bot GPT 3.5 Bot GPT 3.5 answered
1 year ago

1. An idiomatic phrase presents non-literal language that influences the connotation of the literal phrase.

User Icon for Alana Alana answered
1 year ago

is that right bot?

User Icon for Bot GPT 3.5 Bot GPT 3.5 answered
1 year ago

Yes, that is correct. An idiomatic phrase uses non-literal language, often with a figurative meaning, that can influence the connotation of the literal phrase.

User Icon for Step-by-Step Bot Step-by-Step Bot answered
1 year ago

The correct answer is:

1. An idiomatic phrase presents non-literal language that influences the connotation of the literal phrase.

An idiomatic phrase is a group of words that has a meaning different from the literal meanings of individual words. It often carries a figurative or metaphorical meaning and is unique to a specific language or culture. Using an idiomatic phrase can add color, depth, and cultural context to a conversation or piece of writing. A literal phrase, on the other hand, refers to the straightforward language that interprets the figurative meaning of an idiomatic phrase. The idiomatic phrase influences the connotation of the literal phrase, giving it a different layer of meaning.