What rhetorical device is used in the dangerous building that is a hundred feet high and the stars can be plucked with your hands?

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Li Bai's "Sleep in the Mountain Temple at Night": "The dangerous building is a hundred feet high, and you can pick the stars with your hands" uses exaggerated rhetoric, and the first sentence "hundred feet" is a virtual reference Rather than actually referring to it, the second sentence uses the extremely exaggerated method of "picking stars" to highlight the towering mountain temple, showing an ethereal and magnificent "Mountain Temple Picture at Starry Night".

This is Li Bai's "Mountain Temple Picture" Overnight in the Mountain Temple. The dangerous building is a hundred feet high. You can pick the stars with your hands. You dare not speak loudly for fear of frightening the heavens. Dangerous building: high building. This refers to the temple built on the top of the mountain. Hundred feet: imaginary refers to not a real number. It describes the building as very tall. Gao. Stars: The collective name for the stars in the sky. In today’s terms, it means: The tall buildings of the temples on the mountain are so high that people can reach out and pick the stars in the sky. From a rhetorical point of view, it should be an exaggeration. Exaggeration is the use of rich imagination. , a rhetorical technique that purposely amplifies or shrinks certain image characteristics of things based on objective reality to enhance the effect of expression. It is also called exaggeration or exaggeration. Poetry emphasizes the extreme. What is used here is one-pole enhancement, which blindly emphasizes the meaning of the building. Towering. There is a description of the height of the granary in the new folk song. It is said that people on the granary "pull up the white clouds to wipe their sweat, and smoke a bag of cigarettes under the sun." It is extremely said that the granary is so towering. Exaggeration is a common technique in poetry

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