What is literal?

A literal is when you take something exactly as it is, without adding anything extra or changing its meaning.

Imagine you have a box full of toys, cars, balls, and blocks. If someone says, "I want the toy that's in the box," they're being literal. They just mean the actual toy inside the box, not a pretend one or a picture of it.

Like Reading a Recipe

Think about baking cookies. If a recipe says, "Add 1 cup of sugar," and you put in 2 cups, you’re not being literal, you changed the amount. But if you follow it exactly, that’s literal cooking!

Or Playing with Blocks

If your friend says, "Build a house," and you use blocks to make something that looks like a house, you're being creative. But if you just stack blocks straight up without making any rooms or doors, that's being literal, you’re following the instruction exactly as it was given.

Being literal is like listening to instructions and doing exactly what they say, no more, no less!

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Examples

  1. A child says, 'I'm going to eat the whole cake!', literally, they mean they will consume every piece of it.
  2. Someone says, 'He ran like a cheetah.', literally, he is not a cheetah, but he runs very fast.
  3. When you say, 'It's raining cats and dogs,' literally, there are no animals falling from the sky.

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Categories: Science · language· meaning· semantics