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 rhetorical techniques. The first sentence "hundred feet" is an imaginary reference rather than a real reference, and the second sentence uses " The extremely exaggerated technique of "Stars can be picked" highlights the towering mountain temple and presents an ethereal and magnificent "Starry Night Mountain Temple Picture".
This is Li Bai's "Night Staying Mountain Temple" with dangerous buildings hundreds of feet high. You can pick the stars with your hands. You dare not speak loudly for fear of frightening the people in the sky. Weilou: high building, here refers to the temple built on the top of the mountain. Hundred feet: imaginary refers to, not a real number, here describes a very tall building. Xingxing: the collective name for the stars in the sky. In today's terms: The towers of the temples on the mountain are so high that people can reach out and pick up the stars in the sky. From a rhetorical point of view, it should be an exaggeration. Exaggeration is the use of rich imagination and a purpose based on objective reality. A rhetorical technique that greatly enlarges or reduces certain image characteristics of things to enhance the effect of expression, also called exaggeration or exaggeration. Poetry emphasizes the extreme, and what is used here is one-pole intensification, blindly emphasizing the towering of the building. In new folk songs, there is a description of the granary. High, it is said that people "pull up white clouds to wipe their sweat, smoke a bag of cigarettes against the sun" on top of the granary, which expresses the towering nature of the granary. Exaggeration is a common technique in poetry.