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🌟 What’s a Hyperbole?

(Elementary Level)

A hyperbole (pronounced hy-PER-buh-lee) is an exaggeration that isn’t meant to be taken literally — it just makes something sound funnier, stronger, or more dramatic.

💡 Example: “I’m so hungry I could eat a horse!”
Nobody’s really going to eat a horse — but it shows how hungry the person feels.


🪶 Kid-Friendly Examples by Theme

🍎 Everyday Life

  • I’m so hungry I could eat a horse!
  • My backpack weighs a ton.
  • I have a million things to do.
  • I waited forever for the bus.
  • My hands are freezing off!
  • This book goes on for ages!
  • My brain is going to explode from all this math.

🧒 School & Homework

  • The homework pile is taller than a mountain!
  • My pencil’s been working nonstop for hours.
  • I’ve written a billion words today.
  • This test took a thousand years.
  • My teacher gives enough work to fill a truck!

🐾 Animals & Nature

  • That dog is as big as a house!
  • The fish I caught was as long as my arm!
  • The wind almost blew me into space.
  • The tree reached all the way to the clouds.
  • The sun was blazing hot — I melted!

😂 Silly / Funny Exaggerations

  • I laughed so hard my stomach fell out!
  • My little brother talks a mile a minute.
  • That ice cream was so good I could swim in it.
  • I ran faster than a rocket.
  • My shoes are older than dinosaurs.
  • I’m so tired I could sleep for a hundred years.

💡 Teaching Tips for Homeschool or Writing Practice

Try this mini-activity:

  1. Ask your child to describe something ordinary (e.g., being hungry, tired, happy).
  2. Have them rewrite it using a hyperbole.
    • “I’m hungry.” → “I’m so hungry I could eat the table!”
  3. Discuss why it’s funny or memorable — and when exaggeration makes writing more interesting.

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