You’re asking about “what kind of figurative language is this,” but I don’t see the actual phrase, sentence, or line you want analyzed.

To identify the type, I’d need you to paste the exact sentence. Once you do, I can tell you whether it’s most likely:

  • Simile (comparison using “like” or “as,” e.g., “Her eyes shone like stars.”)
  • Metaphor (direct comparison, e.g., “Time is a thief.”)
  • Personification (giving human traits to nonhuman things, e.g., “The wind whispered secrets.”)
  • Hyperbole (deliberate exaggeration, e.g., “I’ve told you a million times.”)
  • Idiom (fixed phrase with a nonliteral meaning, e.g., “Break a leg.”)
  • Other types like alliteration, onomatopoeia, symbolism, or irony.

Reply with your exact example, and I’ll name the figurative language type and briefly explain why it fits. Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.