Characteristics of Arabic in the richness and diversity of its rhetorical connotations
Abstract
The Arabic language is characterized by its eloquence and eloquence; It has given the speaker many ways to express his thoughts. If his speech is directed to the general public, his words are explicit in the performance of the meaning and do not achieve any kind of sensory stimulation for the soul, but present what it sees in front of it verbally so that the image and the original are identical, and this type of speech is understood by all people. But if it is directed to the special, and its owner relies on the imagination,which is motivated by sense and emotion to choose the means by which to reveal the reality of things, there may be an urgent necessity to use a simile, metaphor, metaphor, or metaphorical use of the word so that the real phrase does not sing in the same subject matter, and this type of speech is understood by all people. All these forms and moulds adapt to the Arab desire for expression, travelling with him in his quick glance, or in his long contemplation, and helping him in revealing the depths of his chest.